Those cracks were one of the first things I noticed when looking at the car before buying it. There was the same issue on the drivers side a few weeks ago and if I recall, I sanded them down to the red primer and it was a well done primer job. I dont recall using paint stripper like I did on the trunk, but, the end result was almost perfect with a long board with 100 grit. Im probably gonna try a spot area with the stripper and go from there just to help keep the dark blue dust down to a minimum haha.
Today I picked up all the glass stuff. The glass guy explained in great detail how its done, gave me a roll of the butyl tape, a bottle of primer with some "ball" brushes and a caulking gun tube of butyl sealant. Just a small, 1/8" bead around the outside edge of the tape which is put on the glass BTW, and set it in place. He also gave me a special little tool to spread any squeezed out stuff back into the joint for any irregularities, especially where I fabbed all the channel work together. For 25.00 I couldnt go wrong!
After that I shot to menards and they had a "if it fits in the bag its 15% off" sale. For mr that was a gallon of MEK, a quart of contact cement, tape, brushes and some more black sandable primer for 44.00. Such a deal. Tomorrow Im gonna see how the new headliner flattened out, and maybe start the final approach on that job.
The cardboard sail panels and package tray were some weird cardboard stuff that had gotten wet, and eaten by the meeces, and I managed to find a 4x8 sheet of some 1/8" tile board (think shower liner) at retards for 20.00 The OEM stuff MIC'd up at .100" so thats good. Paint it satin black and thats a done deal. Tuff titties on no foam rubber underlayment.
The pic shows the other DE_CRACKED paint job down to the red primer. Kinda weird with no indication of bondo underneath it. Long board picked up 2-3 very minor dings which are now history. Im not looking for perfection, just want it correct. Hmmm..... Bill