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I'm down in San Diego for a while. When I was stationed here as a Marine in
the 60s I took my car down to TJ to get the seats recovered. They did a bangup job for few bucks. I have an older plane that is covered by CAR 3 where the interior fabric only has to meet flash resistance. Modern automotive interior materials meet this requirement. I'm thinking of obtaining the material here in the US and taking my seats to TJ to be recovered. Has anyone done this? I'd sure like to hear about it if so. Thanks Paul N1431A KSDM |
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On Jan 4, 6:44*pm, "Tri-Pacer" no wrote:
I'm down in San Diego for a while. When I was stationed here as a Marine in the 60s I took my car down to TJ to get the seats recovered. They did a bangup job for few bucks. I have an older plane that is covered by CAR 3 where the interior fabric only has to meet flash resistance. Modern automotive interior materials meet this requirement. I'm thinking of obtaining the material here in the US and taking my seats to TJ to be recovered. Has anyone done this? I'd sure like to hear about it if so. Thanks Paul N1431A KSDM Do some research on the civil situation first. While it may be your typical news story (If it bleeds, it leads) there have been reports of dangers to tourists recently. FWIW Rich S. |
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I lived in San Diego in the late 70's early 80's and I thought of the
same thing. I went to the local fabric store and bought the fabric for the seats, but I ended up finding a guy that lived in National City that sewed it all up for me just as cheap as if I'd gone over the boarder. It came out great. It was the seats in my Grumman Traveler where the fabric had worn out. So you might find some local labor that can do the job just as well without having to deal with the boarder. If you have a certified plane, I've heard of a fabric spray you an apply to fabric that supposed to make it meet the fire standards for aircraft interior fabrics. Rich On Sun, 4 Jan 2009 18:44:48 -0800, "Tri-Pacer" no wrote: I'm down in San Diego for a while. When I was stationed here as a Marine in the 60s I took my car down to TJ to get the seats recovered. They did a bangup job for few bucks. I have an older plane that is covered by CAR 3 where the interior fabric only has to meet flash resistance. Modern automotive interior materials meet this requirement. I'm thinking of obtaining the material here in the US and taking my seats to TJ to be recovered. Has anyone done this? I'd sure like to hear about it if so. Thanks Paul N1431A KSDM |
#4
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I'm down in San Diego for a while. When I was stationed here as a Marine
in the 60s I took my car down to TJ to get the seats recovered. They did a bangup job for few bucks. I have an older plane that is covered by CAR 3 where the interior fabric only has to meet flash resistance. Modern automotive interior materials meet this requirement. I'm thinking of obtaining the material here in the US and taking my seats to TJ to be recovered. Has anyone done this? I'd sure like to hear about it if so. Thanks Paul N1431A KSDM I lived in San Diego in the late 70's early 80's and I thought of the same thing. I went to the local fabric store and bought the fabric for the seats, but I ended up finding a guy that lived in National City that sewed it all up for me just as cheap as if I'd gone over the boarder. It came out great. It was the seats in my Grumman Traveler where the fabric had worn out. So you might find some local labor that can do the job just as well without having to deal with the boarder. If you have a certified plane, I've heard of a fabric spray you an apply to fabric that supposed to make it meet the fire standards for aircraft interior fabrics. Rich I have read/heard the same from enough to be convinced that it's true; and any of the better known suppliers, such as Wicks and Aircraft Spruce, should be able to supply the stuff. Someone at EAA should probably know as well. Peter |
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