Bed Lining and YOU

 

  As much as we all love Subaru here there is no getting around the fact that they used thin and improper paint in the bed of the BRAT. Hence we have so many with rust damage. The wheel wells are victim as well but they have their own special feature that causes them to rust out. Every time something scratches the bed good it creates a future rusty scratch and  a future rusty hole. One sure way to deal with this is with a liquid bedliner. This fantastic stuff also has other uses on the truck ranging from bumper refinishing to an interior finish. One thing you don't want to do is underestimate just how evil rust is. The bed of my brat looked pretty good, and it was, one of the best I have seen, yet there were scratches as in any truck bed. A few of these had a little rust in them and there was bit of rust damage along the cab rear wall.

My first inclination was to hit each spot with the wire brush on the angle grinder and this worked pretty good but I began to see that a minor 1 in long rusty scratch no wider than a few hairs could extend another inch in either direction while the paint above looked just fine. So I made the decision to take the entire bed down to the metal so nothing could be hidden. After learning all I could I bought a metal jug of Aircraft Remover which is sold at Autozone, Walmart and I am sure just about any car parts store. This orange goo from hell is no joke, it will bubble the paint right off the metal, and burn through gloves, take off skin and cause general harm. Be sure to watch yourself and apply a thick coating of it so you don't have to go back again. If you use enough the paint comes right off the bare metal. Wear gloves, wear eye protection, and watch those hands. You must also use a natural brush, a plastic bristle one will melt. What you see below is paint bubbling up.

 

After you get the bed stripped and all traces of the Aircraft Remover are cleaned and gone you need to treat each and every little rust spot. Patch any holes and grind smooth any remaining bracket tabs etc. I had little to do here and things looked pretty good in general. Once the bed is where you want it to be you need to use a cleaner to remove all contaminates, I used PrepAll, obtained from Autozone. After the bed is cleaned you are ready to prime. I used a self etching primer that has excellent adhesion to the metal. It is rather expensive but it is a hard primer that will not rub off and it bonds well. After the primer dries you scuff it with a red scouring pad to allow the bedliner better adhesion.

 

  I removed the chrome trim caps on the bed and used the seam that is under there as a dividing line for the liner to end at and it is well covered when you reinstall them. Once the primer is prepped you should apply a initial coat around all seams, panel edges, and corners. I found the spray version of the product worked well for this as well as getting in behind the bed tie down loops and such. After this dries just follow through with the product instructions which pretty much consist of rolling on a thinner first coat and then getting thicker. The end result is rather nice and water becomes irrelevant as it sits on a polyurethane coating rather than on that bare metal from the scratch you got while loading some tools.

The variance in color you see is about 3 Lbs of yellow tree pollen.

 

Tips: Use good protective gear while working with the stripper

         Remove the panels, rear window, and the chrome bed caps

         Seal all seams and corners first

 

Tools: Natural paint brush for stripper

           Basic hand tools for removing panels and trim

           Roller for bedliner

           Tape, plastic, gloves and tons of paper towles

Chems: Aircraft remover

            PrepAll

            1 can spray bed liner

            1 Rhinoliner or Duplicolor bedliner kit 

 

 

 

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OUR Flag, know how to treat it.