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Boat House
Bed Liner on the inside of the boat
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<blockquote data-quote="DaveInGA" data-source="post: 285297" data-attributes="member: 166"><p>I hate carpet too. One thing I found and preferred ordering straight from the company vs. from a retailer is they take your order, then they make the batch you ordered and ship it straight to you. So when you get the stuff, the chemicals are fresh and work their best. I've used bedliner that sat for quite a while on a retailers shelf with less than desirable results, so getting it fresh was important to me.</p><p></p><p>I do think it's worth while, if you're going to use a bed liner type material in a boat, that you prep properly and use the recommended primer for the material you are putting it on. The aliphatic blend I mentioned in my earlier post is preferred for boats due to it becomes harder and stands up to heat/sun/moisture/traffic much better.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DaveInGA, post: 285297, member: 166"] I hate carpet too. One thing I found and preferred ordering straight from the company vs. from a retailer is they take your order, then they make the batch you ordered and ship it straight to you. So when you get the stuff, the chemicals are fresh and work their best. I've used bedliner that sat for quite a while on a retailers shelf with less than desirable results, so getting it fresh was important to me. I do think it's worth while, if you're going to use a bed liner type material in a boat, that you prep properly and use the recommended primer for the material you are putting it on. The aliphatic blend I mentioned in my earlier post is preferred for boats due to it becomes harder and stands up to heat/sun/moisture/traffic much better. [/QUOTE]
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Boat House
Bed Liner on the inside of the boat
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