Augoose
Lieutenant Junior Grade
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2010
- Messages
- 1,223
So when I purchased my new to me 1999 Chris Craft 200 a few years ago, I eventually noticed that the dashboard panels were made of plastic and had a painted on wood grain. Over the years and due to the PO over-tightening the mounting screws, the edges of the plastic where the screws passed through began to crack. The apparent solution at the time to the PO was to GLUE the dashboard panels in place rather than fix or replace them. Well the same PO who had the bright idea to do that also had poor attention to detail, as the glue ran over and dripped all over. Sure the panels were securely in place but it looked pretty bad and it was not the right way to tackle the project. Also the sun had pretty much bleached away any wood grain appearance, leaving the panels pretty faded and ugly. The Chris Craft steering wheel had suffered a similar fate, with the wood having not been taken care of.
So this spring I decided to pull all 5 dashboard panels and see what I could do to clean them up, fix the cracks, and either have them redone in mahogany or some composite which could then be painted.
Here is what I started with....
I then removed the panels....
cleaned them up and repaired all the cracks with epoxy.
I then started researching wood grain vinyl wraps and purchased a 3m product called Burl Wood Wood Grain Vinyl Wrap. The install was very easy and I used a hair dryer to warm up the vinyl and stretch it in place. The corners were a bit tough but a combination of stretching and use of the hair dryer (or heat gun) made it look great. I then used a precision cutting knife to cut out all the gauge holes....
So last night I installed all the gauges back in place following the photos I took when I disassembled everything.
My phone doesn't take the greatest photos and so the image quality doesn't do the 3M product justice, but honestly it looks like real burl wood and shines nicely!
I would definitely recommend a quality vinyl wrap to anyone trying to restore similar components.
So this spring I decided to pull all 5 dashboard panels and see what I could do to clean them up, fix the cracks, and either have them redone in mahogany or some composite which could then be painted.
Here is what I started with....

I then removed the panels....

I then started researching wood grain vinyl wraps and purchased a 3m product called Burl Wood Wood Grain Vinyl Wrap. The install was very easy and I used a hair dryer to warm up the vinyl and stretch it in place. The corners were a bit tough but a combination of stretching and use of the hair dryer (or heat gun) made it look great. I then used a precision cutting knife to cut out all the gauge holes....

So last night I installed all the gauges back in place following the photos I took when I disassembled everything.

My phone doesn't take the greatest photos and so the image quality doesn't do the 3M product justice, but honestly it looks like real burl wood and shines nicely!
I would definitely recommend a quality vinyl wrap to anyone trying to restore similar components.
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