may be some tub issues under that diamond plate floor, I'd do some looking before deciding. The spots where the cross supports touch the aluminum floor are susceptible to galvanic corrosion.
THING 1 - 1973 88 SIII - SOLD
THING 2 -1974 88 SIII Daily Driver - SOLD
THING 3 - 1969 88 SIIA Bugeye Project
THING 4 - 1971 109 SIIA ExMod - SOLD
THING 5 - 1958 109 PU
THING 6 - 1954 86" HT
may be some tub issues under that diamond plate floor, I'd do some looking before deciding. The spots where the cross supports touch the aluminum floor are susceptible to galvanic corrosion.
I was thinking the same thing. Generally nobody "upgrades" their tub floor and wheelwells with diamond plate and wood unless there's some compelling reason to do so, though I DO see a custom roll cage also, so you never know.
All in all, I think it's much better to see diamond plate in the interior rear tub than anywhere on the exterior, but that's just my personal preference.
--Mark
1973 SIII 109 RHD 2.5NA Diesel
0-54mph in just under 11.5 minutes
(9.7 minutes now that she's a 3-door).
I prefer a rubber stall mat to the hard floor, so my vote is for no treadbrite. To my mind, it is usually used to hide flaws or damage. I'd wonder what awaits you if you took it up.
I like it, I think it provides a nice custom look to the truck. Leave it alone.. By looking at the rest of the truck, I doubt that it is "hiding anything".........as someone who has had his seats redone with genuine leather....does that negate my vote.......Donnie
I spent most of my money on women & cars, the rest of it I just wasted.......
Generally nobody "upgrades" their tub floor and wheelwells with diamond plate and wood unless there's some compelling reason to do so, though I DO see a custom roll cage also, so you never know.
Yup, my floor was pretty bad. Removed al the spotwelds and rivets holding it in, cleaned up all the flanges, used adhesive and HS aluminum rivets to attach the new diamond plate floor, stiffeners and supports. Looked a little out of place at first because it was sooo shiney but that wen't away pretty quick.
I agree that just slapping the new over the old is fools time spent.
It looks like they did a good enough job -i'd leave it and go for a drive. Once you rip it out you'll have new issues to tackle. Save your $$ and man hours for when something goes south under the hood, then you will have a real issue to deal with. At that point you'll be happy that you have the plate on the wings because your paint won't get scratched unnecessarily by tools and you'll find that it keeps your sockets from rolling off your wing tops.
The plate will dull down over time and will blend in nicely.
After a month's work I have transformed this 88: Removed the giant roll bar. Removed diamond plate from rear area, removed homemade wood dash panels and replaced with all new original panels painted to match. Stripped every wire from the truck. Installed new wiring harness with new alternator. Added the missing fan shroud. I am thrilled with the result!
Attached Files
'65 Series IIA, 88'
'00 Discovery II
'08 Jaguar xj8
'95 RRC LWB, deceased.....
'75 Forward Control GS, 72 FL 64, gone to CA!
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