Materials
I bought 6 yards of fabric - I opted for a "headliner material" which is foam backed
2 Cans of 3M 90 Spray on Adhesive (Do not go cheap on your adhesive)
Cost
Headliner Material: 6 yds. @ $11/yd = $66 | 50% off coupon = $33
Adhesive: 2 @ $13/ea = $26
Considering I'm not using all of the material (only half of the headliner) -- lets say the total cost is no more than $50.
Time
Headliner Removal: 45mins <-- never done it before
Removing old material and preparing: 60min
Recovering: 60min <-- a lot of wait time
Covering Pillars: 20min per set (3 sets)
Covering Sunroof Slide: 20min:
Installation: 30 min
So, this is a good weekend job - remove headliner on Friday (maybe prepare too). Recover on Saturday. Install on Sunday :)
Warning
Some vehicles are equipped with curtain airbags located in the headliner itself. I don't know how the airbag deploys nor do I know if the headliner material will effect operation. Likewise for pillar mounted airbags. That is one system you don't want to screw around with. <-- Just like seat mounted airbags -- you're not putting seat covers over them right? :P
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Zapp
The hot/humid climate of South Florida does a significant amount of wear and tear on this car's interior. In a related story - I had a pair of plastic bike fenders warp to the state of unusable inside the car on a particular day with hot summer sun. It slowly tears apart any vehicle that has anything more than bare plastic finishing.
I have since gone car-less.... My house mate, however, has a 2000 golf. The weather of Norther California has been much kinder.
As far as removing the old foam a scotchbrite pad works well. I will caution people that there are several types of hard headliner depending on vehicle make. Some are cardboard, others are pressed fiberglass. The fiberglass ones are easy to wreck. Use caution not to disrupt the outermost layer, it is semi-sealed and once you go past it will deteriorate easily and make u itch like crazy.
As far as alternate coverings go, I would say vinyl is too heavy for a spray can glue, but I have used vinyl and leather with professional glues no problem. A nice light alternative which is popular these days is faux suede.
I'm going to have to do this to my '95 Ford Escort. Hopefully I can figure out how to remove the headliner.
That is a great question to ask. I would really like to know if using a foam backed headliner is absolutely necessary or not. I am about to change my headliner out soon and prefer not to use the same foam backed material because it actually will deteriorate and cause problems again. I know that the deterioration of this foam is toxic.
If anyone has an opinion on this, please post it.
Thanks