1) I would appreciate hearing from any of you who have had this done and an
idea of what it should cost me. Cloth is good enough - I don't need leather
(and I probably can't afford it).
2) I live in New Hampshire and if you would have any recommended shops with
a lot of experience for this type of job, I would appreciate it.
Thanks,
Quill
Expert on Everything
->I just did my 1965 Cherokee 180.
I did the 182 ('58 model) with Airtex interior and couldn't be happier. I got
the seat foam locally and did the canvas underlayment myself, but other than
that, it was total Airtex.
They had a couple of goofs. I sent them pictures and in a week or so I had the
right parts. They are REALLY nice people to deal with.
Jim
Jim Weir (A&P/IA, CFI, & other good alphabet soup)
VP Eng RST Pres. Cyberchapter EAA Tech. Counselor
http://www.rst-engr.com j...@rst-engr.com
Don Stretch at Airtex was supremely helpful. On the first
set they sent, the dye lot had changed from their samples
and the shade wouldn't work with my colors. They took it
back and made up a second set. A couple of parts were cut a
little small; they send out replacements no charge. No
hassle, GREAT people to do business with.
I understand they even offer somewhat "custom" sew patterns,
now, if you wnat an Airtex interior without the "Airtex
look".
Rich
Alan Copeland
Replacing ALL The plastic can get quite expensive.
Is it cracked and broken or just dirty and scratched?
I have replaced some parts that really needed it and I have painted others.
Automotive Paint places have paint designed for plastics.
The Brand I used was "SEM" It worked very well and looked almost new.
I would not try and change the color myself, I'd try to stay as close to
the original as possible. Painting the off-white plastic blue to match
the fabrics would probably REALLY show any new scratches or wear.
I have bought 182 parts from kinzie plastics.
As to the upholstry, I have always done this myself with whatever materials
I determined met the legal requirements for MY plane and certification
standards it was built under.
My local FSDO says this is decorative, nonstructutal and perfectly legal
for my as the pilot/owner to do myself. I was not going to argue with that.
Marc
"D.F.S." wrote:
> Timothy Quill <tim....@an.hitchcock.org> wrote:
> > I have a 1978 R-182 with the original interior which looks every minute of
> > 20 years old. I am in the market for a new interior including all the
> > plastic pieces except the instrument panel (I'll do this later), seat
> > coverings, wall and overhead coverings, carpeting, etc.
>
> Replacing ALL The plastic can get quite expensive.
I replaced all the plastic when I redid the interior. I went with Kinzie and it
cost about $900 for the plastic and about $250 for one of the local mechanics to
install it after hours.
> "D.F.S." wrote:
Well, I thought I spent almost that much with Kinzie for just the seat backs and
plastic "Pockets" for the front seats. I figure that is proably 1/3 of the plastics
on the interior.
I like what I got from them, but I'd still paint pieces unless they were broken.
My seat backs were just too busted up.
Marc
Our Warrior received an all new Airtex interior in '96, installed by the
meatheaded former owner (an FBO that was going belly-up in WI).
The materials are generally good quality, and have held up well -- but the
installer makes a HUGE difference. The side panels in our plane were put in
using way more screws (of different sizes) than necessary, the seat
headrests were installed BACKWARDS -- some parts were cut slightly too
small, some seams weren't straight, etc.
Over time we've fixed all this stuff, but do it right in the first place!
Also -- the carpeting had to be replaced this year, after just four years of
wear. Of course, they installed a LIGHT GRAY carpeting, which showed every
speck of dirt and grease. Stupid. We had an aircraft upholstery shop
replace it with charcoal gray carpet that looks GREAT, for half the price of
new Airtex.
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Warrior N33431
Timothy Quill <tim....@an.hitchcock.org> wrote in message
news:B663A5F1.259%tim....@an.hitchcock.org...
>Also -- the carpeting had to be replaced this year, after just four years of
>wear. Of course, they installed a LIGHT GRAY carpeting, which showed every
>speck of dirt and grease. Stupid. We had an aircraft upholstery shop
>replace it with charcoal gray carpet that looks GREAT, for half the price of
>new Airtex.
My C182P has fairly light colored carpet. It's a light tan/grey
berber carpeting, very high quality, and it's got some stains in it,
but I think they're from a drink spill or something like that. It
still looks decent, but the one really smart thing the installer did
was to make the carpet sort of "sectional". It's velcroed together,
but you wouldn't know it unless you lift up certain sections and see
where the overlap is. Also, there are runners along the back seat and
for the pilot and copilot floors, so the actual carpeting underneath
is in good shape.
I figure replacing carpet must be fairly inexpensive. What did you
pay for yours?
--Ron
Because we were in no hurry, the guy at the upholstery shop "saved up"
pieces of carpet left over from bigger jobs (you do two King Airs, and
you've got enough leftover for our spam cans!) for a few months, and gave us
a good price.
All told, including stitching the new carpeting into the existing side
panels (the carpet goes six inches or so up the sides, making integrating
new stuff kinda tricky), we paid $250.
Shoot, I can't get ANYTHING done to my plane for $250 -- let alone something
that makes THAT big of a difference in the overall quality of the
experience. Damn, we just paid $300 trying to fix a nosewheel shimmy, and
got zippo to show for it...
--
Jay