HOW TO
4 Steps to a Top-Notch Convertible Top - Page 2
Pick your color. Sometimes you'll have to pick single-, double-, or triple-texture fabric. Double-texture is probably best for do-it-yourselfers. It is thin enough to work with and thick enough to last. Canvas tops stain, fade and wear fast. Vinyl-coated fabrics are usually best. Use new top pads if the old top has the "starved-cow" look. The pads hold the top frame in position and protect the top from damage due to wind buffeting and repeated "ups and downs."
Curtain windows and backlights may be extra. You may need new cables, tacking strip, hardware, wire-on and a front roll. Some installs require an air-powered upholstery stapler and others only a hand stapler. Stainless steel staples prevent rust. Get cement, trim adhesive, razor blades and a yardstick.
Top install techniques vary widely by car and installer. The factory shop manual may explain how to fabricate spacer sticks to hold the top rails in proper alignment. Sometimes you'll have to measure bow height with a yardstick. The Internet has good tips for convertible top installs. Eastwood (www.eastwood.com) sells a general how-to-install-a-top video by movie-car customizer Eddie Paul.
Start by removing moldings from the rear of the body well. Cover the deck lid, then remove the molding fasteners. Put them in baggies, along with slips of paper with re-installation notes written on them. Use a grease pen to mark where screws and moldings hit the old top. Take photos or make sketches everything.
Lift top and remove roll strip at front. Remove staples and screws. Save screws and hardware. Remove rubber weatherstripping from side rails, the glued-on quarter flaps and one end of cables. If top is attached to middle bows, remove attaching screws and listings (thin rails that slide through "pockets" sewn in the top and screw into roof bows). Listings fasten the top to the middle bows.
Latch the top to the windshield header. Remove wire-on from rear bow. Remove all staples so they don't tear the new top. Remove or pull back well cover to get at fasteners. Sometimes fastener removal loosens a removable metal tacking rail. Sometimes plastic tacking strips are riveted to the outer body edge. If broken sections need fixing, drill rivets, get new strip and rivet in place.
Loosen everything enough to allow removal of the old top. Staples that hold the bottom rear edge of the top to the tacking strip must be removed. Old staples left behind can pierce the new top and cause tears or water leaks.
If installing new pads without spacer sticks, remove one pad and use yardstick to measure bow-height. Check measurement with top kit supplier. Staple first new pad to bows to keep frame aligned when installing second pad.
Remove the rear curtain. Mark the center of rear bow. New curtain will be notched to line up with mark. Staple curtain to bow from center, pulling wrinkles as you move towards edges. Unlatch top and prop up. Fasten bottom of curtain and window to tacking strip with tacking rail or retainer. Latch front and adjust.
Before installing new top, lay it on clean floor under old top. Transfer reference marks like bolt holes and tacking strip locations to new top with a laundry marker. Put new top over old one. Compare reference marks. If you see differences, use half the distance between marks as a reference.
Heat softens fabric, making it easier to stretch. Crank up heat in shop the night before install. A heat gun helps install the plastic curtain window. Gun must be kept at least six inches away. Use swirling motion to avoid too much heat.
Position top over framework until it sits right. Secure top to No. 2 and No. 3 bows with listings. Raise top off header and attach cables. Center top valance over No. 4 bow and staple from center out. Pull out fullness and wrinkles. With screws and cement fasten quarter flaps in position. Re-install weather stripping.
Latch top to windshield. Pull fabric gently over No. 1 bow. Mark position. Raise top and pull fabric past reference mark for car (about a quarter inch). Secure to bow with screws, staples and glue. Check appearance and operation. Install roll over windshield header. Glue with contact cement. Staple from below.
With top latched, look it over. See if it fits straight and evenly on both sides. Make adjustments. When it looks right, staple new fabric to tacking strip. Start at front and move to rear. Use few staples so you can pull and adjust at curves. Eliminate wrinkles. Avoid excessive stretching. Keep top material flat.
You may find a "feature strip" on the rear bow. This molding is covered with same cloth as top, It slides over an aluminum molding that screws into bow. On some cars you can substitute "wire on" from convertible top kit for the feature strip. Make sure you install it with the fold to the front, so wind won't unfold it. Next, install decorative end caps and use a silicone sealer for waterproofing.
Make holes for belt molding studs in bottom edges of top and backlight and line up with holes in tacking strip. Put fasteners on studs where they protrude inside body well. Then, re-install fasteners that hold well cover in position. Install plastic trunk gutter molding and any body moldings that trim the top well.
Websites for Leading Convertible Top Suppliers
Kee Auto Top Manufacturing Co.
A.A. Best Co.
Electron Top Manufacturing Co.
1A-AutoMotive
Robbins Auto Tops
R & R Seals, Latches, Hardware
Repairing convertible roof rail seals and hardware is mostly a question of tracking down parts sources. New windshield header top latches are being reproduced for some cars. Check with Hydro-E-Lectric of Punta Gorda, Fla.
Top Motor Install
Top motors typically reside behind rear seat. The seat bottom is removed first. Then loosen bolts holding seat back in place. Use wrench to detach bolts holding top motor in place. Loosen clips that hold hydraulic lines and use a six-point socket wrench to undo lines. Unplug wiring going to old top motor and take the motor out. Installing a new motor is the reverse of this process.
Top Cylinder Install
If rods in top cylinders are in, you need 50-60 psi pressure to push them out. Don't force them. A convertible top motor can supply pressure needed to fill cylinders to 75 percent of capacity. Fluid that seeps out the vent hole can be saved. The fluid in top motor reservoir goes into cylinders, causing rods to move. You'll see one go up and down before the other. Keep doing this until the rods move fully in or out. If they are in the out position, stop running the pump.
Keep up this process to refill cylinder to 75 percent full. When you can't add more fluid, pull rods back into cylinders. Do final check for 75 percent fluid level, then retract rods and screw plug into reservoir. Use pump to run rods out to be attached to top. Assuming no other problems, your top will now work.
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