goodtoothdoc
New Member
Who is everyone using to supply correct original style carpet for '68 New Yorkers? Thank you
Hello Big John, which type material did you go back with and what about sound deadener underneath, what did you use if you dont mind me asking. I want to get mine done this summer.The only company making molded original style carpet is Auto Custom Carpets (ACC) and they don't sell to the public, so you'll have to find a vendor. My vendor of choice is Auto Carpet for Car, Truck, Van - Stock Interiors as they seem to have consistently good prices and, in my experience, the best service.
Here's my '65 300L with its new carpet and a tip. Use a soldering iron to make the holes for seat belts and seats.
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Thanks a ton!The only company making molded original style carpet is Auto Custom Carpets (ACC) and they don't sell to the public, so you'll have to find a vendor. My vendor of choice is Auto Carpet for Car, Truck, Van - Stock Interiors as they seem to have consistently good prices and, in my experience, the best service.
Here's my '65 300L with its new carpet and a tip. Use a soldering iron to make the holes for seat belts and seats.
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80/20 Loop. I always suggest getting samples first. I didn't do any sound deadener on the last cars I've done. I did place some Ram Mat on the floor of my convertible though.Hello Big John, which type material did you go back with and what about sound deadener underneath, what did you use if you dont mind me asking. I want to get mine done this summer.
I don't think they ever sold directly to the public. I bought some carpet direct from them many years ago and had to use my friend's business info to order.Did ACC stop selling direct to the public when they came to "own the market" for molded carpet? Just curious.
CBODY67
When I first discovered ACC, they were at a high-level national Corvette expo in Dallas, TX. Full display of products for Corvettes. The best OEM-level resto carpets I had ever seen. All literature they had was marked with the company name, contact into, and phone number. No mention of "going through one of our agents" at all.I don't think they ever sold directly to the public. I bought some carpet direct from them many years ago and had to use my friend's business info to order.
Thanks, I was thinking the 80/20 looked more of my old carpet was. It looks like its molded real good.80/20 Loop. I always suggest getting samples first. I didn't do any sound deadener on the last cars I've done. I did place some Ram Mat on the floor of my convertible though.
My Barracuda with ACC carpet.
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I'm going to take that back about them selling to the public. I just looked at the web site and I see a "cart" and all that.When I first discovered ACC, they were at a high-level national Corvette expo in Dallas, TX. Full display of products for Corvettes. The best OEM-level resto carpets I had ever seen. All literature they had was marked with the company name, contact into, and phone number. No mention of "going through one of our agents" at all.
Years later, in about 1990, if you were near the Year ONE trailer at Mopar Nats, later in the day, you could see the ACC truck restocking the trailer. That scenario played out each year after that into the 2000s. Probably later, too.
Year ONE used to have multiple pricing levels. Retail, dealer of record, and volume purchaser (from high to lowest prices).
In those earlier times, many repro vendors would sell to the public as a normal situation, but they could also have other resto shops set up as "local/regional dealers". Who had a representative stock of things for the cars they worked on (i.e., Mustangs, Camaros, GTOs). So a customer to go there rather than buying from the main company directly. Might even save some money and get the items quicker, too.
In those earlier times, they were known for the best place to get repro carpets, so the brand mattered. Now that they have basically purchased their molded carpet competitors (probably through attrition and older owners wanting to retire), perhaps they are retreated from pure retail? So the comment about ACC only selling to their wholesalers and not the general public seemed different from what I had previously known.
Enjoy!
CBODY67
California thing. You see it on a lot of stuff.Is the warning down the bottom an industry requirement or just a California thing?
View attachment 710451
Yep, maybe, or maybe they are more concerned about litigation, which it seems, given the huge number of court cases filed each year, is about as popular as buying lottery tickets. I just thought it odd that only the ca.gov appears in the ad, instead of a general, or federal warning. Don't go getting offended CA people!Such advisories have been around for decades! Just like the old gas pump advisory signs not to ingest tetraethyl lead. Or the little pieces of paper that used to come inside the box of certain GM parts (1990s) that a particular cleaner had been used in the manufacture of that part. Now, it seems that ANYTHING extra that California law has required is automatically demonized when it is only there to protect the small percentage of this nation's citizens (and those companies' customers) who might be allergic to such substances. No more, no less. How might you feel if your spouse was allergic to the residues of that substance and had a potentially bad health result from that exposure? ALL because you wanted new carpet in your car? BTAIM
Realize, too, that for such advisories to happen, "somebody had to die" (or get close to death) before legislation requiring the advisories to be on the affected products happens.
Good day,
CBODY67
And the last people to give a f**k about your health are the ones in government, if the opposite were true, there is a long list of things they could ban and help the population have a better quality of life, instead, the medical establishment rakes in billions...It seems to me that just living now days causes cancer and Everything has CERTAIN SIDE EFFECTS!