Anyone know anything about bed liners? I know very little but I need a spay on bed liner that I can still slide things on. I use my truck to haul wood and some of the wood is pretty big and needs to slide out. Do these smooth bed liners work like that, or will they still have a rubber grip.
Anyone know anything about bed liners...
If you have an aluminum ford truck, you better get the best bed liner, because that weak piece of shit can't even handle a toolbox falling in the bed.
>This just in, aluminum is softer than steel. In other news, the sky is blue
What did you expect you fucking mongoloid. Ford is appealing to the market for people who want a big truck but use it as an suv; which is the majority of truck sales these days. I bet you shitpost about mall crawler too, you cretin.
>le ford meme.
Thats nice. But no. Its one model out of the 100 years by one brand thats been out for one year since trucks were invented. Thats like me assuming you have microphallus because your underwear is feeling loose.
I've hauled shit in trucks with line x and rhino liner. The rhino liner is way grippier than line x. It's a pain in the ass. The line x isnt near as grippy though. You can still slide stuff around on it fairly easily. It's not near as slippery as no liner or one of those cheap plastic drop in ones, but you can definitely still slide shit on it. So spray in liners aren't all the same shit. It would probably be best to check out a few different brands. Maybe get some samples if you can. If not, you probably wouldn't be disappointed with line x.
Desu those plastic drop in liners are a dream to slide cargo inside with
Those spray in liners are a bitch as far as sliding like say, cases of soda in.
Yeah those drop-in liners look like trash and they dont stop water from getting underneath them. Just had a thought tho. I could get a plastic dropin liner cut just for the bed, to "drop-in, when I go do wood if the line x is to grippy. Thanks guys.
>Yeah those drop-in liners look like trash and they dont stop water from getting underneath them.
They also get dirt and things underneath them then scratch the bed paint all up so it looks like shit when you do eventually remove it.
Nobody "needs" a bedliner unless you are selling the truck and want pretty. They serve zero functional purpose.
If your bed bolts go in from the top down covering them with bed liner is retarded because fuel pump changes are often much easier if you unbolt the bed instead of dropping the fuel tank. (You can remove the bolts, plug the holes, line the bed, and reinstall the bolts.)
Use a drop-in liner for ease of sliding (and ease of maintenance if your bolts are top down style).
If you cut up old drop-ins they are great for working under your truck since you can slide on them comfily.
>They also get dirt and things underneath them then scratch the bed paint all up so it looks like shit when you do eventually remove it.
Which doesn't matter since only reason to remove is to line or replace.
Trucks are for hauling. No bed lined or not won't look worse if used. Unless you are autistic and stare at your bed instead of using it, just use it.