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Elmers waterproof wood glue , and wooden paint stirring sticks ( free at most
places) from the auto paint supply store. Flatten the panels somewhere with
stacks of books on them for a while some place safe first.  They will
flatten out after ever so slightly dampening them before heaping the books on
them. ( same process for early Saab rear deck/parcel shelf)Once flat again
the paint sticks can be strategically cut to fit and reinforce the rear side of
the cardboard panels.  Cover the paint sticks with some clear plastic wrap
and pile the books on again. That keeps the moisture of the glue from warping
the panels while the glue dries.  This should preserve the panels , do an
invisible reinforcement ( once in place) and keep humidity from making them
curl again.ChuckSent from my LG Mobile------ Original message------From:
JMFangio via SpridgetsDate: Wed, Feb 5, 2020 11:33 AMTo: [bugeye];Spridgets via
Spridgets;Cc: Subject:[Spridgets] Bugeye boot panelsGood Morning all,
so I took a look at the inside of the boot and the cardboard panels that were
so nice when installed many years ago have slumped and look terrible. I was
wondering if any of you fine folk had or had considered using fiberglass resin
to reinforce them?
My thought is to get them flat-ish and paint the backside with resin.
What say you all?
Lester
------------------------
spridgets@autox.team.net
Archive: http://www.team.net/pipermail/spridgets http://autox.team.net/archive
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<div style="font-size: 10pt;"><div dir="auto">Elmers waterproof wood glue ,
and wooden paint stirring sticks ( free at most places) from the auto paint
supply store. Flatten the panels somewhere with stacks of books on them
for a while some place safe first. They will flatten out after ever
so slightly dampening them before heaping the books on them. ( same
process for early Saab rear deck/parcel shelf)</div><div dir="auto">Once flat
again the paint sticks can be strategically cut to fit and reinforce the rear
side of the cardboard panels. Cover the paint sticks with some
clear plastic wrap and pile the books on again. That keeps the moisture
of the glue from warping the panels while the glue dries.
</div><div dir="auto">This should preserve the panels , do an invisible
reinforcement ( once in place) and keep humidity from making them curl
again.</div><div dir="auto">Chuck</div><div dir="auto"><br></div><div><div
dir="auto" style="font-size:9pt;"><i>Sent from my LG
Mobile</i></div></div></div><div style="font-size: 10pt;"><div
id="LGEmailHeader" dir="auto"><div dir="auto"><br></div><div dir="auto">------
Original message------</div><div dir="auto"><b>From: </b>JMFangio via
Spridgets<spridgets@autox.team.net></spridgets@autox.team.net></div><div
dir="auto"><b>Date: </b>Wed, Feb 5, 2020 11:33 AM</div><div dir="auto"><b>To:
</b>[bugeye];Spridgets via Spridgets;</div><div dir="auto"><b>Cc:
</b></div><div dir="auto"><b>Subject:</b>[Spridgets] Bugeye boot
panels</div><div dir="auto"><br></div></div><pre>Good Morning all,
so I took a look at the inside of the boot and the cardboard panels that were
so nice when installed many years ago have slumped and look terrible. I was
wondering if any of you fine folk had or had considered using fiberglass resin
to reinforce them?
My thought is to get them flat-ish and paint the backside with resin.
What say you all?
Lester
------------------------
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spridgets@autox.team.net">
spridgets@autox.team.net</a>
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