Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 767 Threads: 33
Reputation:
16
Location: Beautiful Northumberland
Car type: 1933 RP Saloon (aka Mildred)
Hi Tiger
Yes that's what i did, just made a cardboard template to set out the holes for handbrake, greasing access etc wrapped it over, tucked it under the floor mats. Stuck it down with sikaflex black so that it looks more formed than wrapped and away you go.
Andy
Enjoy yourself, it's later than you think!
Joined: Jan 2018 Posts: 152 Threads: 11
Reputation:
1
Location: Brecon
Car type: 1932 4-seat Tourer, 1925 Pram Hood Chummy
"3mm castle profile rubber". What is that?
Joined: Nov 2017 Posts: 562 Threads: 56
Reputation:
7
Location: West Yorkshire
Car type: Type 65 1934 + RP 1932
I have ordered the mats from Jamie at Seven Workshop, who says they fit his Nippy. I will be getting some rubber to suit to fabricate a transmission tunnel cover.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 473 Threads: 63
Reputation:
2
Location: West/North Devon England
Just a thought - - - any wet getting under rubber mats will stay forever tiil mats lifted and floor dried out.....rust promotion. At least with carpeting there can be drying out by normal evaporation. My Nippy special has had to have new floors and 2 other bodies are also a bit rotted. I intend to carpet once back on road.
Dennis
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,230 Threads: 33
Reputation:
7
Location: Salop
Car type: '28 GE Cup. '28 AD Chummy '30 RL Saloon. '34 RP Saloon. Too Many toys!
Having scrapped many cars (father was a scrap man) the root cause for most rotten floors seemed to be sodden carpet. Things like vans with rubber seemed to suffer less, though certainly not immune. I'd regularly have to sit in cortinas amd escorts to be pulled out of fields etc to steer them and theyd often have little or no floor. The contemporary transits suffered in the door step area, but the bit around the pedals would be fine.
Joined: Nov 2017 Posts: 562 Threads: 56
Reputation:
7
Location: West Yorkshire
Car type: Type 65 1934 + RP 1932
I think the trick is never to put the car away wet, lift the floor coverings regularly and de-humidify the garage over winter.