Speaker cover...recover. Remedy for purple faded speaker covers!
#1
Speaker cover...recover. Remedy for purple faded speaker covers!
Hey guys, thought I would share my 1 hour adventure today.
I got sick of looking at the ever-so-famous purple faded speaker covers all we SC300 owners love so dearly.
I went to the fabric store and picked out an Alcantera (suede) type fabric for about $6 a yard. Also bought some super tacky adheasive spray.
It was pretty simple and straight forward. Just work patiently and cleanly.
Though I have NOT figured out how to remove the rear deck cover to remove the two rear round speaker covers. I have a picture in my service book that shows two bolt/screws that hold it down, but there is none such in my car!
Anywho, here are the pics. I will have some better daylight pictures tommorow.
*pardon the unit not being centered. I was in a rush for daylight!*
*Tweeter covers before and after*
*Done*
I will get some interior tweeter shots tommorow.
-Jonathan
I got sick of looking at the ever-so-famous purple faded speaker covers all we SC300 owners love so dearly.
I went to the fabric store and picked out an Alcantera (suede) type fabric for about $6 a yard. Also bought some super tacky adheasive spray.
It was pretty simple and straight forward. Just work patiently and cleanly.
Though I have NOT figured out how to remove the rear deck cover to remove the two rear round speaker covers. I have a picture in my service book that shows two bolt/screws that hold it down, but there is none such in my car!
Anywho, here are the pics. I will have some better daylight pictures tommorow.
*pardon the unit not being centered. I was in a rush for daylight!*
*Tweeter covers before and after*
*Done*
I will get some interior tweeter shots tommorow.
-Jonathan
#2
Dye is much easier than recovering. The material you used will hamper the tweeters also.
biggest problem with recovering is when summer comes the glue will melt back off the stuff and peel right off.
biggest problem with recovering is when summer comes the glue will melt back off the stuff and peel right off.
#4
Here's my dye job, much easier.
http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d5...uff/dye007.jpg
http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d5...f/dscn3693.jpg
http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d5...uff/dye007.jpg
http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d5...f/dscn3693.jpg
#5
I bought the highest quality material of that type I could find. I also bought the highest quality adheasive I could find which also gave me the highest melting unadhearing point of any in the store. I do not cheap out.
Either way it looks better than it did. And its sure easy to do and I would gladly do it again in a couple of years if it does fade. Which I know it will not since I am going to be putting on window tint (5% rear/15% sides).
-Jonathan
Either way it looks better than it did. And its sure easy to do and I would gladly do it again in a couple of years if it does fade. Which I know it will not since I am going to be putting on window tint (5% rear/15% sides).
-Jonathan
#6
Doesn't matter if you cheaped out or blew the wad. No craft store sells the stuff we used to use on speaker boxes which is the only thing that won't release in the summer heat.
I think it looks good though. hope it holds! The bigger concern is that the tweets are very important in the front door and they are going to be muffled with that non porous material.
I think it looks good though. hope it holds! The bigger concern is that the tweets are very important in the front door and they are going to be muffled with that non porous material.
#7
Doesn't matter if you cheaped out or blew the wad. No craft store sells the stuff we used to use on speaker boxes which is the only thing that won't release in the summer heat.
I think it looks good though. hope it holds! The bigger concern is that the tweets are very important in the front door and they are going to be muffled with that non porous material.
I think it looks good though. hope it holds! The bigger concern is that the tweets are very important in the front door and they are going to be muffled with that non porous material.
And again, I made sure that the fabric adheasive (which also sells materials to cover speaker boxes since there is an automotive stereo shop right next door) would hold up. Its specifically made to bond fabrics to wood and speaker box usage is on the label.
I'm seeing a trend. Too many of you just want to see it go wrong so you will have something to type about. Typical.
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#8
*putting thread link in favorites for future reference*
#9
i too am speaking from experience. i had a very similiar material on my seats in my integra when i had them recovered. i spent well over $6 a yard (and not because i was ripped off) and had 15 percent tint on my windshield and 5 percent on my windows and it faded to an orange-ish color the same way my friends seats did with similiar material. no one here hopes you fail.
#10
Of course they faded, they wore down since you were sitting/rubbing the material. But these are not seat covers and I will be putting the most expensive window tint I can find. I have tinted numerous cars in the past and you do get what you pay for in U.V. protection.
These are just speaker covers. At any rate, they look a hell of alot better than the ghey purple fade.
O. L. T.,
I never asked for any help. Just was posting what I did. You are the one who conjured up all this "information" about material and aheasive woes. And as soon as I typed about knowing what I am doing, you seem to take offense? Jeez.
Either way, I have had more than enough experiance restoring vintage automobiles and recovering steering wheels (leather) and and building motors and such. But I give you guys the benefit of the doubt because you dont know me any much more than the words that I type. Of course you would have reason to doubt my knowledge an experiance if I have never told you how much I have had.
Good day,
Jonathan
PS: I have more pictures coming up tonight.w
These are just speaker covers. At any rate, they look a hell of alot better than the ghey purple fade.
O. L. T.,
I never asked for any help. Just was posting what I did. You are the one who conjured up all this "information" about material and aheasive woes. And as soon as I typed about knowing what I am doing, you seem to take offense? Jeez.
Either way, I have had more than enough experiance restoring vintage automobiles and recovering steering wheels (leather) and and building motors and such. But I give you guys the benefit of the doubt because you dont know me any much more than the words that I type. Of course you would have reason to doubt my knowledge an experiance if I have never told you how much I have had.
Good day,
Jonathan
PS: I have more pictures coming up tonight.w
Last edited by simann; 03-22-07 at 09:31 PM.
#12
simann,
OLT is right on with his caveat on the speaker cover material. Just because you can see through it doesn't mean that it is sonically transparent - it likely is not.
However, if you're just using the OEM tweets you aren't exactly prepping an audiophile setup and if you can't hear any difference and are pleased with the appearance (they do look much better ) that's what's important.
Looks like a good match on the color of the material to your back deck as well on the 3rd brakelight.
OLT is right on with his caveat on the speaker cover material. Just because you can see through it doesn't mean that it is sonically transparent - it likely is not.
However, if you're just using the OEM tweets you aren't exactly prepping an audiophile setup and if you can't hear any difference and are pleased with the appearance (they do look much better ) that's what's important.
Looks like a good match on the color of the material to your back deck as well on the 3rd brakelight.
#13
Thanks Dave!
The OEM material on the back deck is a dark grey matte, but I picked a black Alcantera type fabric. I thought about covering the whole deck the same color, but I want to see how this would turn out first.
I still have not got to get the lower door speakers, since they are attached to the door panals themselves from the inside (for what I can see and read in the service manual) and am probably going to wait another week or so to do those. I dont like rushing things, and honestly I'm in no hurry.
And yes, I am very pleased with the OEM sound system and really have no plans to upgrade it in the near future. So this cover modification is honestly a "quick" fix to a very UGLY problem. I am 50% deaf in my left ear anyways...so its not like I can really hear the clarity
And as far as longevity of the fabric material and adheasive goes, its so easy to do I would not mind re-doing it if anything went wrong.
I thought I would post it up for others to get a good idea of what it might look like and actually how easy it can be if you have the proper material and time(patience).
Anywho, I will have the better pics up tonight.
-Jonathan Mann
The OEM material on the back deck is a dark grey matte, but I picked a black Alcantera type fabric. I thought about covering the whole deck the same color, but I want to see how this would turn out first.
I still have not got to get the lower door speakers, since they are attached to the door panals themselves from the inside (for what I can see and read in the service manual) and am probably going to wait another week or so to do those. I dont like rushing things, and honestly I'm in no hurry.
And yes, I am very pleased with the OEM sound system and really have no plans to upgrade it in the near future. So this cover modification is honestly a "quick" fix to a very UGLY problem. I am 50% deaf in my left ear anyways...so its not like I can really hear the clarity
And as far as longevity of the fabric material and adheasive goes, its so easy to do I would not mind re-doing it if anything went wrong.
I thought I would post it up for others to get a good idea of what it might look like and actually how easy it can be if you have the proper material and time(patience).
Anywho, I will have the better pics up tonight.
-Jonathan Mann
#14
Of course they faded, they wore down since you were sitting/rubbing the material. But these are not seat covers and I will be putting the most expensive window tint I can find. I have tinted numerous cars in the past and you do get what you pay for in U.V. protection.
These are just speaker covers. At any rate, they look a hell of alot better than the ghey purple fade.
O. L. T.,
I never asked for any help. Just was posting what I did. You are the one who conjured up all this "information" about material and aheasive woes. And as soon as I typed about knowing what I am doing, you seem to take offense? Jeez.
Either way, I have had more than enough experiance restoring vintage automobiles (race cars) and recovering steering wheels (leather) and and building motors and such. But I give you guys the benefit of the doubt because you dont know me any much more than the words that I type. Of course you would have reason to doubt my knowledge an experiance if I have never told you how much I have had.
Good day,
Jonathan
PS: I have more pictures coming up tonight.w
These are just speaker covers. At any rate, they look a hell of alot better than the ghey purple fade.
O. L. T.,
I never asked for any help. Just was posting what I did. You are the one who conjured up all this "information" about material and aheasive woes. And as soon as I typed about knowing what I am doing, you seem to take offense? Jeez.
Either way, I have had more than enough experiance restoring vintage automobiles (race cars) and recovering steering wheels (leather) and and building motors and such. But I give you guys the benefit of the doubt because you dont know me any much more than the words that I type. Of course you would have reason to doubt my knowledge an experiance if I have never told you how much I have had.
Good day,
Jonathan
PS: I have more pictures coming up tonight.w