Carpet Installation

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Joined
Jun 22, 2005
Threads
175
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2,936
Location
Atlanta
Website
www.prequel.agency
I think I've got the bolt hole location down - put bolts in the holes, feel them through the carpet, mark, cut. Cutting is easy too - either an X with a razor, or heat a socket and cut perfect little cauterized holes.

But, not having pulled carpet out of this - it had a worn and torn piece of vinyl in place when I got it - I don't really have a good "go-by" to see where the carpet should terminate under the dash and how far to cut it back, when to cut around brackets, etc.

I'd love some thoughts before I start hacking away at the carpet...

I pulled the stereo, wiring and the stereo section of the dash to get a little better access. For perspective, this is shot from the passenger seat - looking at the transmission tunnel where the stereo should be.

#1 is easy. #2 and #3 will take a bit more measuring, cutting, cutting some more...

Screen Shot 2020-01-15 at 12.39.25 PM.png
 
I think I've got the bolt hole location down - put bolts in the holes, feel them through the carpet, mark, cut. Cutting is easy too - either an X with a razor, or heat a socket and cut perfect little cauterized holes.

But, not having pulled carpet out of this - it had a worn and torn piece of vinyl in place when I got it - I don't really have a good "go-by" to see where the carpet should terminate under the dash and how far to cut it back, when to cut around brackets, etc.

I'd love some thoughts before I start hacking away at the carpet...

I pulled the stereo, wiring and the stereo section of the dash to get a little better access. For perspective, this is shot from the passenger seat - looking at the transmission tunnel where the stereo should be.

#1 is easy. #2 and #3 will take a bit more measuring, cutting, cutting some more...

View attachment 2183652

This video may help out a little bit:

 
Thanks @yotadude520 ! It did help. It also illustrates how much easier the thinner backed carpet is to work with. That stuff went in like a beach towel compared to the extra thick, double layer, ultra supreme stuff from ACC.
 
Well, that wasn't so bad. From start to finish, it took right at three hours to put the carpet in. Oh, I know... that's not exactly setting a record. Actually, it was for me ;)

Couple things I learned - from you guys, YouTube and my friends at ACC...
- Put bolts in place and use them to feel through the carpet to mark the holes.
- Mark the holes on one side with a Sharpie, pull the carpet, cut the holes
Screen Shot 2020-01-15 at 8.38.02 PM.png


- Use a socket (that you're willing to sacrifice) the diameter of the bolt shaft - on an 8 or 10" extension
- Heat the socket with a torch
- Use your HotSocket like a cookie cutter!
Screen Shot 2020-01-15 at 8.39.34 PM.png


- Reinstall and bolt down that side - move to other side, repeat

With all the seat and seatbelt bolts holding the carpet in place, now it's safe to start cutting the edges to fit - no worries of the carpet shifting
- For the tight spots, use a heat gun to soften that thick rubber backing.
- I opted for the #3 method to cut around the stereo console brackets. Just measured from the shifter cut-out and made two 1.5" square holes... and stuffed, tugged, pulled... Took about 20 minutes just to get that section tucked. But it looks perfect - no cuts and the carpet can't pull or shift.
Screen Shot 2020-01-15 at 8.54.17 PM.png


That's it for today. I'll button up the trim, stereo, etc. tomorrow. Overall, yeah - the thicker backing is likely worth it. That wasn't that bad - it was my first time doing carpet.
Screen Shot 2020-01-15 at 8.49.38 PM.png
 
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Thanks guys. It rained for three days and there were no other projects I could get to on the truck... no incentive to rush. ;)
 
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That turned out awesome! I want to roll around on it
 
That turned out awesome! I want to roll around on it

Thanks. I am LOVING how much quieter the truck is! Okay, sure - that thin vinyl floor covering, with nothing under it, wasn't blocking much noise... I don't know how much the FatMat (sound-deadening) and thicker mass-backing contributed... kinda don't care. I'm sure they contributed. If I had to guess, the FatMat (or equivalent) and standard carpet probably knocked out the majority of the noise.

Worth noting - just adding a couple sections of sound-deadening to the doors, significantly changed how they sound when shutting them - from "clink" to "thunk"... scientifically speaking. It reminded me of putting your finger on a bell. You don't have to cover the whole surface to stop the bell from ringing.
 
Worth noting - just adding a couple sections of sound-deadening to the doors, significantly changed how they sound when shutting them - from "clink" to "thunk"... scientifically speaking. It reminded me of putting your finger on a bell. You don't have to cover the whole surface to stop the bell from ringing.
An engineer buddy said you only need to cover 25% of the surface to gain benefit. You don't need to cover everything. Talking about doors and side panels here, not floors.
 

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