Thank you all for the many terrific suggestions for roll-on bed liner kits! I'll be testing them soon. I've provided links to the products tested in this video but recommend shopping around for a better price. Thanks again, Todd Herculiner: amzn.to/2EfyFrG PlastiKote: amzn.to/3aOwjw3 EZ Liner: amzn.to/3hlakPN RustOleum: amzn.to/2FOx7FH Dupli-Color: amzn.to/3j38Mu2
might want to include with and without primer on it also. Some of these may act completely different when a bonding agent is added between the liner and old paint or raw metal. Some of the differences seen in cold weather testing and room temperature may actually be differences between how they bonded to old paint versus raw metal.
Consumer reports are crao. Anyway, most people. Who. Review don't even know how to use it. Properly and complain, or if. It breaks they don't call manufactor
Imagine the conversation between the neighbors when Project Farm comes driving by in his truck...🤣🤣 Neighbor 1 to neighbor 2: "here comes that man again with the green truck that has 7 different bed-liner stripes, with the front bumper held in 5 by zip ties and back bumper held on with Loctite". Neighbor 2 to neighbor 1: "oh that's nothing, I heard he runs 4 lawnmower engine under the hood of his truck, and they all have cylinder heads made of JB.Weld and he runs Amazon Basic Motor Oil in them with Restore oil additive in all 4 engines so he gets better compression". 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Hands down one of the best channels on TH-cam. Always informative. Always valuable. Always clean. The class, respect, and decency of Mr. Project Farm shine through consistently in every video. He is the epitome of the good old hardworking, thoughtful, classic American man. Thank you for your time and videos!
Instead of pro sprayed stuff, which would obviously be very superior, to me the interesting comparison would be 2-part spray at home kits. SEM and UPOL among others have a spray yourself kit, about $100, they come with a spray gun, and mix with a hardener. That's the real reason these spray can ones all failed, they aren't hardened, just dried via evaporated solvents. Put solvents back on them, they'll just turn back to liquid again.
@@ProjectFarm I second that idea! Been considering doing the Raptor Liner on my jeep. Would be cool to see you put it through it's paces before I pull the trigger though.
Duuuuuuuude, your videos are so valuable to me and I’m sure many others. Humbly speaking on behalf of all of us, I can’t tell you how much your channel means to us:
Hey man! You're very meticulous when it comes to your videos... I'm from Malaysia, and I really love the fact that you include the metric units in all your measurements and readings. For example, temperature. It's a rare thing for an American TH-camr to do. Keep it up! Loving your videos!!!
It's not too rare. It's much more rare for metric supremacists to refuse to acknowledge the existence of the imperial system, as well as try to reinforce the narrative that the imperial system sees no use outside of the US. Of course if you've ever been to Canada, the UK, anywhere in the Caribbean, northern Mexico, and other places, you know this is not the case.
@@cm01 the imperial system is terrible. This is coming from someone in manufacturing and engineering. Take, for example adding 5mm and 8mm, easy to do. Then try to add 3/16" and 5/32". Water freezing at 0 vs 32...the imperial system should be abolished.
@@bradbb2005 adding 3/16" and 5/32"? easy, 11/32". I do that in my head all day long and you can too, unless you, the engineer, is dumber than me, the lowly carpenter. Unlucky there mate gg better luck next time. Try to wrap your head around the idea that people that use the imperial system all day like it. That doesn't mean its better, but we aren't going to switch from QWERTY to DVORAK anytime soon either. It works just as well once you get to know it even if it is a little inferior in theory. Nobody wants to re-learn. Obviously we all already know the metric system, but getting it as drilled into our thinking as the imperial system would take a lifetime.
I'd really loved to see a comparison of rubberized undercoatings! 3M, SEM, Permatex, Rust-Oleum, Dupli-Color, CRC, and Bondo. There are even more brands like POR-15, Zenex, Transtar, and Evercoat.
These are good to spray on mower decks. If you mow while the grass is still damp most of it will fall off instead of clumping and it makes washing it off a breeze. I have used it on my zero turn for several years
oh dam, what a great idea! every time some one comes up with a great application like this i feel dumber for not thinking of it. Thanks Rus ridge now i have work to do, lining my mowers deck.
Project Farm please compare the bedliner to anti rust paint like hammerite... You could possibly paint it on oil based antirust paint with a brush. why not? Bedliner is less used in Europe is my personal impression, on tractors people used anti rust paint and undercoat on tar/wax base no bedliner is used for the same purpose of protection. The antirust paints are usually thicker and can live with a lot of scratches and impacts of painted more than one layer
Works best if you start with 1/2" or greater metal though so that it doesn't weaken as much over the years... I wonder how much a pickup would weigh if ever piece of sheetmetal was replaced with 1/2" plate though... :)
It's amazing the amount of time and energy you put into these videos. I've yet to see a single test where I wasn't impressed with the amount of thought and effort put into getting a quality result.
They do the wallet test; how little they can spend on product vs how much they can sell the product for vs how many people they can get to buy it before consumers realize there is something else available for a better value.
@@nieldcreek2098 corporate greed is worse than ever before. Planned obselescence and anti right to repair policies. This is why our planet is going to the shits. Not your dirty smokey old car but your fancy new hybrid (because they can sell you a new car when your battery dies).
I used Rustolium on a Honda Ruckus project (dual sport-ish scooter). Once you remove all of the plastic, you’re left with a raw aluminum frame, and the fuel tank is where your feet rest. I sanded and primed the entire frame and tank, then applied 7 very light coats, one coat a day. The can says it dries to be handled in 24 hours, but it didn’t fully cure for two weeks, something I’ve noticed with all rattle can paints and varnish. After that, it was solid. Your fingernail couldn’t scratch it no matter how hard you try, and rocks couldn’t chip it. With all of the thin coats, it made a very consistent 1000 grit matte finish. Occasionally I would get gas on the fuel tank. It would soften the paint, but cure back to its original hardness within a day. 2 years of use didn’t have a single chip or scratch before it was stolen. But if I were to do something similar again, it looks like plastikote might be worth a try using my painting method.
I'm not so sure it was a good idea to apply it in 7 light coats over the course of a week. But it sounds like it worked out Most products have a repsray window, if you don't put a second coat on withing X time you are supposed to wait Y time and sand to recoat. I've noticed the curing times being far longer than spec too. I sprayed some doors in 2k paint and it claimed cure time to be something like 30 days, but it took about 60 before it was actually hard enough to wet sand and polish properly.
I slept well last night because of you. I needed to pick a brand for a bedliner and thought of your channel. I just KNEW that you would have professionally reviewed these and slept well knowing that I'd make an informed decision in the morning. THANK YOU for all you do.
Your no-nonsense, straight forward testing is excellent. I've used a lot of your videos to help decide which product to use for a variety of things. Thank you for providing these to us. The one suggestion I would offer, though, is to also add a numeric value to your scores that can be summed up for a total score. For example, A=5 and F=1. Using this method it is easier to immediately see which product does better overall at a glance. Using this method on your chart, Plasticote = 32, EZ-Liner & Rustoleum = 30, Duplicolor = 31 and Herculiner = 28. The A-F grade per category allows people to choose based on individual criteria, but the numeric score provides a "best overall" value. Regardless if you ever use this method, I definitely look forward to future test videos.
Great vid. I have a twenty year old Mac tool box, top is worn out from me throwing my tools on top of it and just plain old daily wear and tear. I was going to just repaint it. Did that 4 or 5 years back. I'll use the Plastikote instead. Thanks !
I bought a TX Tacoma with an original Toyota-brand plastic liner. It's durable and looks good, especially for being a '98 commercially owned rig. Only one problem, the bed of my otherwise totally rust-free truck is rotted out under the plastic liner. Maybe the plastic liners seemed like a good idea when new. I thought that drilling drain holes on each end of the ribs might prevent the problem. Does anyone have any experience with this?
@@elultimo102 I'm dealing with the same rust issue with the plastic liner. I'm pretty much going to get rid of the plastic liner and go with a spray on. I can't think of any way to keep out the moisture when it's fully encapsulated. That said, I may go with the Plasticote after watching this video.
@@hugoparker1427 A previous owner put 1/8 steel sheet under the liner. It's holding, but I would like to find a bottom from a bashed-in bed and get it welded in, or cut out the rot and install a large & costly sheet of aluminum diamond-plate, or a good solid junkyard bed. (I have a camper shell on, so it will be even more trouble).
I wish I would have found this channel sooner. You are super informative, to the point, entertaining, and you consider things woth products that I never would like the sun exposure. Thanks for all the hard work you do.
I had a 500.00 Rhino liner in my '95 Ford for ten years and it held up great . I hauled scrap metal , pine logs and tons of brush . My friend got another brand and it turned to goo when he delivered an automatic transmission that spilled fluid about,. I think price may be a hindrance for this test though.
That contest is a mix of prograde and diy though. There are plenty of next level diys like Raptor and monster. I would be interested in seeing that competition.
Like enamel, bedliners can still be off-gasing up to 30 days later (regardless of what the can directions say). I think the results could very well change if the test panels were left out for a month until full hardness had been reached.
audioh0lic - Scratching is all about the hardness level. I agree most people won't wait 30 days, however I'd bet most people aren't going to throw a bunch of bricks or scrap metal straight into their newly coated bed within the first week, either. It's going to be more typical stuff like boxes, ATVs, bags of mulch, kayaks, lumber, etc, that will be used in the first month. Odds are that it will be over a month before the first time you find that nail hidden under a big stack of lumber, try dumping gravel into the bed, or drop a tool box onto it.
Absoluitley great idea I would love to see por15 tested against similar products and also a handful of popular undercoating products such as Eastwood, rust oleum rubberized (regular) & rust oleum rubberized professional, krown, fluid film, 3M professional rubberized & 3M rubberized regular, tested against each other. That would be an awesome video I know many people would benefit from!!
Would love to see a comparison of the roll or brush on bed liners as I have had much better luck with those. Thanks as always for your incredibly informative and scientific videos
That was a great showing of each product and test results , which will make it an easy choice for each person no matter climate or material handling . Awesome, thank you for your time in this presentation , well worth it. It sure will help save people money. Great job
I just got a 97 f250 crew cab short bed. Tons of stuff to fix and get working again but I am certainly using this video and others in my decision making process. Appreciate you brother. You are one of a kind.
Heculiner painted on a Jeep frame and floor boards thick with a brush and roller has lasted me for 8 years so far. Apparently it works better as an undercoat than it does as a bed liner. Thank you for these videos. They are very helpful for us do it yourselfers
@@ProjectFarm I know for the hurcliner they say that the spray is supposed to be for tuchups and for getting places you can't reach with the stuff from the can
I would caution anyone choosing anything based on any one, single review. Great work done here, but sample size one, his conditions vs yours, product lot variance, phase of he moon, etc. Thanks - Lumpy
I live in Hawaii and you probably know , that we have many pickup trucks , so you answer all questions even more then I expected ! This information is very helpful ! Thank you !
Great video, as always. I think my takeaway from this one is: Either get it professionally sprayed (like my father in law did with his truck) or get a drop-in liner (like I did with mine). These rattle cans just don't seem up to it, and I suspect multiple coats would help, but still not be as reliable.
Not adding nothing new here but just wanted to say that I am changing the product I will purchase tomorrow for my Jeep based on your video. Thank you. Invaluable informative service, your channel is.
Good idea! Brake fluid can be used to swell rubber parts. It's useful to get rubber suspension bushings to stop squeaking. It might take some time, but it works. It can be used, using maybe an ounce or two into at least several quarts of oil, to swell the seals in engines to stop a rear or front main seal leak. Sometimes works with valve cover gaskets if they're the older style. It also eats away paint and attracts water to itself, causing all the parts saturated in it to rust quicker. It's hygroscopic, meaning water is attracted to it. Weird stuff.
Another suggested test: see if the liner will re-bond to the washers after having been soaked in the solvent. I assume if something spilled in your bed you wouldn’t go and wipe it off right away so this would test what happens after the solvent dries away
Exactly what I need, an inexpensive method to spray that back of my 90 Ford F250. Don't need to spend hundreds of dollars, a few cans will work for me and a Saturday afternoon. Thanks for all your efforts in putting this together.
I would also. You obviously always do awesome with your tests. But if you tested one coat. At least 2. But. With that being said. It does show results. Helped me choose a product. It's neat to see the results between the products.
I'd love to see the advertised "High Friction" that these different brands advertised. Just to see how grippy they are depending on the material that's being tested on them as well. Some might hold on to very flat surfaces better, while others might be better at holding on to material with an very uneven surface.
A way that we used to make an anti-skid coating for a boat, steps, or the wing root area on a small aircraft where you step on it to get into the cockpit was to use flat black oil based paint, brushed on thickly, and then dusted with mason's sand while wet, followed by a lighter coat of paint when it dried.
I'd thought about doing my own bed liner but after watching this video, no way. None of these will hold up in the long run for anything heavier than a soccer ball or a sack of groceries. I'll stick with Line-X, professionally done. I've had outstanding results with Line-X in several trucks done over the years, and if you buy enough of this spray on crap to do all surfaces of the bed, sides, and tailgate to a thickness equal to what a professional shop would charge for Line-X, the cost for each would be close enough to go with the pro job. Thanks PF for yet another informative video that's saved me money!
I know this is an old video, but the ultimate scratch test is a large ball of tangled barb wire, about 12lbs and drag it out. That is how you break in the bed of a new truck and get over the issue of scratching it.
I am sure this is alot of time consuming but I'm glad everyone appreciates your videos I remember the first set of videos made my day that someone would take their time to help the average joe and people that really appreciate their hard earned cash to not waste anything. Keep up the work!!
Kumquat Lord I agree. I thought I seen it in a spray can but I was wrong. I really want to see a test of shell V-POWER premium gas. Its a detergent/ lubricant fuel and claims to clean 60 percent of carbon build up with the first tank through your engine and lubricate. That's all I use and I really want to see if it's worth the extra money. I use mobile 1 annual protection, Motorkote, and a K&N filter. I've ran my car 7k miles now and my oil is still clear like it's brand new. My car has 150k miles on it. I really only try to use the best everything but I think I'm going to tear apart my lawn mower to see for myself if she'll has actually kept my engine clean.
evilreddog The plastic box on my 2013 beats them all. I think you’ll see more of that in different thicknesses for the different duty trucks. It’s lighter than metal and don’t need refinish cause they don’t rust.
As a solvent, I really want to see what kind of difference wal-mart or store brand and name brand brake cleaners up against store and name brand carb/choke cleaners. I seriously follow this channel and I’ve watched and learned a lot of things I really have wondered about, so I’m really glad somebody is out there doing this.
I've used duplicolor roll on liner before. I stopped using it because it's crap. It's practically ruined in the first week of use. If you spill a gas can, the whole bedliner will just melt away. I used ezliner aerosol on my S10 pickup about 15 years ago. It was hard, but the surface was clumpy and uneven. It wasn't a grippy texture, more smooth and wavy. When it was hit or scraped hard, the top surface cracked to reveal hollow air pockets underneath. I was largely unimpressed. The past few years, I've been using Raptor Liner spray in bedliner. The texture is great and it's pretty tough. I work in road construction and we use the beds and trailer decks very hard. I've seen some professional line-x liners that are very, very tough. Much better than the DIY stuff. It's not invincible, but i think I'll try the tintable Raptor liner to actually paint the exterior of my s10. It's an off-road truck so I'm not concerned about a flawless, deep glossy paint job. Keep up the informational videos. I love them. 👍
I think I might look into raptor bed liner as well. You said you have faith in it right? Because I'm going to be doing my entire Bronco in it and possibly the underside of my blazer which will be my off-road toy.
@mens B yes, i think its like pro spray paint, 2 pack type, is much tougher, perhaps also the bedliner is a much better product if its similar, it can be done by diy, if you can get it, but youd have to wear proper masks
Fr Cl I‘d imagine you could use the flexible 2 component epoxy roofers use to seal ... everything. It absolutely stinks for days, but once it‘s on a surface it‘s never coming off. Can’t even cut it with a knife yet it‘s somewhat flexible.
Forgot how about auto plastic paints.i tried rustoluem look great for well 5 months then started to fade now looks almost the hue and sheen when I started. I like your videos almost scientific and real world combined. Keep up the good work!!
I'd also like to see if multiple coats make a difference and price to cover a full bed. square footage of coverage to price compared to roll-on and professionally coated.
cheeto4493 I used 1.5 gallons of Rustoluem roll on bedliner in a 6 foot Chevy Colorado bed. I did several thick coats on the bottom, using a sponge to finish and give it better texture. It's pretty tough stuff, but took about a month to fully cure
I'm in the process of doing my 20 year old Tundra, and my experience of using Harbor Freight bed liner ( took it back cause it stopped up at nozzle immediately) and then went with Rustoleum. I agree with you the RUstoleum looks almost like black spray paint, and I like the texture of the Harbor Freight but reading other reviews suggests the products that give you more texture also clog up the spray nozzle .
In my experience it has but I'd love to see a video between the roll on ones as well as the spray on ones (that require a paint gun and air compressor)
I very much liked your series of tests. I did not expect anything to hold up to acetone as was the case. I don't know what kind of liner spray was in my truck but it was amazing! It never scratched thru in either hot or cold weather, kept the finish, never chipped, and did experience some small spills of gasoline, diesel, and paint cleaning sprays. Obviously the chemicals were not allowed to stay on the surface but still it was impressive. However it was definitely not a "DIY" finish either. Hats off to a great demo.
I have used herculiner for several years. It rolls on alot thicker than it sprays. I have always rolled it on. The gloss finish goes away in about 3-6 months of sunlight and it looks the same as the others. For a do it yourself bedliner i will stick to herculiner, but if i was was trying to protect a nice truck bed i would probably go and have it sprayed with Linex.
Your reviews are concise, informative, data-driven. For any reviews of any sort on TH-cam, you're a freakin superstar. I like Rustoleum on just the numbers alone, but Plastikote does look better upon initial application.
lol. There are many things that make TH-cam different than TV. Being able to interact with those creating the video seems to be a huge benefit. Also, we're "real" people just like everyone else. No celebrity status or big egos = interacting with viewers. Thanks again!
judging by the vid i probably didnt prepare the surface well enough, sandblasted but didnt clean it for oils afterward. plasticote does look very good too. thank you for the excellent test video once again
They make a spray paint can shaker that fits onto a sawsall in place of a blade. It's awesome and saves me alot of pain from shaking vigorously for all that time.
"Peter, for my sake, don't you know who that is?" Oh lord while I was writing this I imagined him getting to Limbo and saying "Alright well, as you can see we've got a variety of afterlives to choose from, so let's get the testing underway"
Also you should start doing a control. like for this video use bare metal in some tests to show the products ability to absorb effects that would otherwise effect the metal.
Too funny!! I went to look up Herculier reviews and found this video. Some of the other products I considered were also tested! Awesome video. Thank you!!
Perhaps. My 1998 truck has a 20 year old LineX bed liner and it is still in good shape. The only issue I have had with it are on the edge of the tailgate and it was fixed under warranty. The stuff is sprayed on buildings to make it bomb proof and you can coat a cinder block with the stuff, toss it off of a 4 story building and it will internally shatter but the outside will stay intact. They have even coated the Pentagon with it. You kinda get what you pay for.
Always use a primer a good primer before putting on any bed liner make sure you send as much of the paint that you can off so it has something to stick to also always wait at least 24 hours between coats and I would recommend at least 4 coats of bed liner to have a true undestructable layer protecting your truck bed
Magic stuff mate. I was in the market for a bed-liner. This convinced me just to get rubber matting ;-) You're a star, put in so much hard work! Keep it up!
Thank you all for the many terrific suggestions for roll-on bed liner kits! I'll be testing them soon. I've provided links to the products tested in this video but recommend shopping around for a better price. Thanks again, Todd
Herculiner: amzn.to/2EfyFrG
PlastiKote: amzn.to/3aOwjw3
EZ Liner: amzn.to/3hlakPN
RustOleum: amzn.to/2FOx7FH
Dupli-Color: amzn.to/3j38Mu2
might want to include with and without primer on it also. Some of these may act completely different when a bonding agent is added between the liner and old paint or raw metal. Some of the differences seen in cold weather testing and room temperature may actually be differences between how they bonded to old paint versus raw metal.
How about comparing to professionally applied coating like Rhinoline?
Raptor liner, please include that one!
Reading my mind
Raptor liner
You are more valuable than consumer reports.
Thank you!
Consumer reports are crao. Anyway, most people. Who. Review don't even know how to use it. Properly and complain, or if. It breaks they don't call manufactor
By a long shot.
@@richterman3962 your keyboard is the only thing broken here
Agreed! :)
And if you're like me, I want the most bang for my buck but don't have time to figure stuff out like this, that's why I love this channel.
Thank you!
Cut to the chase and find a Rhino dealer.
In my country, doing a Video like this would get you sued (most likely by the least favourite brands), I enjoy watching these here.
@@MrBurnz-cu6xj Line-X
@@ItsIdaho Iran?
It's pretty safe to say that you've got one of the best channels on TH-cam. You really ought to know how much we apprecite the work you put in
Wow, thank you!
The amount of time and effort and attention to detail is truly appreciated.
Thanks so much!
Imagine the conversation between the neighbors when Project Farm comes driving by in his truck...🤣🤣 Neighbor 1 to neighbor 2: "here comes that man again with the green truck that has 7 different bed-liner stripes, with the front bumper held in 5 by zip ties and back bumper held on with Loctite". Neighbor 2 to neighbor 1: "oh that's nothing, I heard he runs 4 lawnmower engine under the hood of his truck, and they all have cylinder heads made of JB.Weld and he runs Amazon Basic Motor Oil in them with Restore oil additive in all 4 engines so he gets better compression". 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Always inpressed in the amount of work you put into your vidoes
Thank you!
Do a part 2
rhino liner
Line-x
Raptor liner
Lizard skin
Great video idea! Thank you
And Monstaliner!
@@ProjectFarm would definitely like to see this ^
Lol all the good omes
Surprised they weren't included here...
Thank you for leaving out the sound when you were scratching the surfaces!
I would like to see how Raptor liner holds up
Lol exactly! But I still imagined it and cringed! : )
He could have included ear protection along with the other PPE at minute 0:34 : )
Hands down one of the best channels on TH-cam. Always informative. Always valuable. Always clean. The class, respect, and decency of Mr. Project Farm shine through consistently in every video. He is the epitome of the good old hardworking, thoughtful, classic American man. Thank you for your time and videos!
Thank you very much!
Instead of pro sprayed stuff, which would obviously be very superior, to me the interesting comparison would be 2-part spray at home kits. SEM and UPOL among others have a spray yourself kit, about $100, they come with a spray gun, and mix with a hardener. That's the real reason these spray can ones all failed, they aren't hardened, just dried via evaporated solvents. Put solvents back on them, they'll just turn back to liquid again.
Great test idea!
THIS is what I would like to see. This single part in can stuff generally sucks.
@@ProjectFarm I second that idea! Been considering doing the Raptor Liner on my jeep. Would be cool to see you put it through it's paces before I pull the trigger though.
0988MarkM
full body, cause I have been trying to talk a friend into doing it, an he just cannot see my vision
@@0988MarkM I've done several Jeep's and trucks with raptor. It's easy to use and as long as you do a good job with prep it last well also!
Duuuuuuuude, your videos are so valuable to me and I’m sure many others. Humbly speaking on behalf of all of us, I can’t tell you how much your channel means to us:
Thanks so much!
Thanks for not wasting my time with this video...you went about the testing with pretty good planning and I can appreciate it. Good work.
Thank you!
Hey man! You're very meticulous when it comes to your videos... I'm from Malaysia, and I really love the fact that you include the metric units in all your measurements and readings. For example, temperature. It's a rare thing for an American TH-camr to do. Keep it up! Loving your videos!!!
Thank you!
I never thought about it this way, but it's very true.
It's not too rare. It's much more rare for metric supremacists to refuse to acknowledge the existence of the imperial system, as well as try to reinforce the narrative that the imperial system sees no use outside of the US. Of course if you've ever been to Canada, the UK, anywhere in the Caribbean, northern Mexico, and other places, you know this is not the case.
@@cm01 the imperial system is terrible. This is coming from someone in manufacturing and engineering. Take, for example adding 5mm and 8mm, easy to do. Then try to add 3/16" and 5/32". Water freezing at 0 vs 32...the imperial system should be abolished.
@@bradbb2005 adding 3/16" and 5/32"? easy, 11/32". I do that in my head all day long and you can too, unless you, the engineer, is dumber than me, the lowly carpenter. Unlucky there mate gg better luck next time. Try to wrap your head around the idea that people that use the imperial system all day like it.
That doesn't mean its better, but we aren't going to switch from QWERTY to DVORAK anytime soon either. It works just as well once you get to know it even if it is a little inferior in theory. Nobody wants to re-learn. Obviously we all already know the metric system, but getting it as drilled into our thinking as the imperial system would take a lifetime.
I'd really loved to see a comparison of rubberized undercoatings!
3M, SEM, Permatex, Rust-Oleum, Dupli-Color, CRC, and Bondo.
There are even more brands like POR-15, Zenex, Transtar, and Evercoat.
Thank you for the video idea!
Get back to making aw11 videos!
@@ProjectFarm Don't forget Plastidip!
Also don't forget chassis saver. It is crazy strong used it on my truck resto.
@@anayaj6355 Haha totally missed this comment. I need the snow to go away!
I cant believe how much effort you put into these videos. You get a like from me good sir. Keep up the great work.
Thank you very much!
These are good to spray on mower decks. If you mow while the grass is still damp most of it will fall off instead of clumping and it makes washing it off a breeze. I have used it on my zero turn for several years
Great tip!
oh dam, what a great idea! every time some one comes up with a great application like this i feel dumber for not thinking of it. Thanks Rus ridge now i have work to do, lining my mowers deck.
Are you spraying the outside or underside of the deck?
Graphite paint works too, brand name is slip plate
I spray my decks with WD40 prior to cutting and then I hose them off
What about Line-X? I know it doesn't come in a spray can, but it might be the best protection coat out there.
Great recommendation! I might test it if there's enough interest. Thank you
If you are going to test LineX you should compare it to RhinoLiner
I've used Line-X on multiple vehicles and it's well worth the money.
I agree. Ive used Line Ex on several trucks and always been happy with it. At the marina i worked at all the trucks had Rhino liner. Total crap.
Project Farm please compare the bedliner to anti rust paint like hammerite... You could possibly paint it on oil based antirust paint with a brush. why not? Bedliner is less used in Europe is my personal impression, on tractors people used anti rust paint and undercoat on tar/wax base no bedliner is used for the same purpose of protection. The antirust paints are usually thicker and can live with a lot of scratches and impacts of painted more than one layer
I’m personally a big fan of rusty metal for minimum friction and cost. It’s also got a rather easy installation.
Works best if you start with 1/2" or greater metal though so that it doesn't weaken as much over the years... I wonder how much a pickup would weigh if ever piece of sheetmetal was replaced with 1/2" plate though... :)
Lol. Unfortunately, strength / durability / service life varies greatly
Fairly good camiflage too!
@@CurmudgeonExtraordinaire Perhaps better just starting off with an armoured car.
It's amazing the amount of time and energy you put into these videos. I've yet to see a single test where I wasn't impressed with the amount of thought and effort put into getting a quality result.
Thank you!
i'm just glad he uses more qualitative, scientific testing methods instead of just some guy throwing rocks at something
The way some of these turn out makes me wonder what tests they actually do before shipping these out.
Thank you for the feedback
They do the wallet test; how little they can spend on product vs how much they can sell the product for vs how many people they can get to buy it before consumers realize there is something else available for a better value.
@@nieldcreek2098 very true
Build/or make it and somebody will buy it.
@@nieldcreek2098 corporate greed is worse than ever before. Planned obselescence and anti right to repair policies. This is why our planet is going to the shits. Not your dirty smokey old car but your fancy new hybrid (because they can sell you a new car when your battery dies).
Now that's alot of damage
lol!
First thing I thought of when I heard that lmao
I almost immediately thought of pewds reviewing flex seal xD
-Bill Swift
I SAWED THIS BOAT IN HALF!
I used Rustolium on a Honda Ruckus project (dual sport-ish scooter). Once you remove all of the plastic, you’re left with a raw aluminum frame, and the fuel tank is where your feet rest. I sanded and primed the entire frame and tank, then applied 7 very light coats, one coat a day. The can says it dries to be handled in 24 hours, but it didn’t fully cure for two weeks, something I’ve noticed with all rattle can paints and varnish. After that, it was solid. Your fingernail couldn’t scratch it no matter how hard you try, and rocks couldn’t chip it. With all of the thin coats, it made a very consistent 1000 grit matte finish. Occasionally I would get gas on the fuel tank. It would soften the paint, but cure back to its original hardness within a day. 2 years of use didn’t have a single chip or scratch before it was stolen. But if I were to do something similar again, it looks like plastikote might be worth a try using my painting method.
Great job! I'm sure it looks nice!
I'm not so sure it was a good idea to apply it in 7 light coats over the course of a week. But it sounds like it worked out
Most products have a repsray window, if you don't put a second coat on withing X time you are supposed to wait Y time and sand to recoat.
I've noticed the curing times being far longer than spec too. I sprayed some doors in 2k paint and it claimed cure time to be something like 30 days, but it took about 60 before it was actually hard enough to wet sand and polish properly.
@@billybobjoe198 this sounds like you used the wrong activator for the application. 2k should be ready to wet sand and polish after 24-48 hours.
I slept well last night because of you. I needed to pick a brand for a bedliner and thought of your channel. I just KNEW that you would have professionally reviewed these and slept well knowing that I'd make an informed decision in the morning. THANK YOU for all you do.
Awesome!
Your no-nonsense, straight forward testing is excellent. I've used a lot of your videos to help decide which product to use for a variety of things. Thank you for providing these to us.
The one suggestion I would offer, though, is to also add a numeric value to your scores that can be summed up for a total score. For example, A=5 and F=1. Using this method it is easier to immediately see which product does better overall at a glance. Using this method on your chart, Plasticote = 32, EZ-Liner & Rustoleum = 30, Duplicolor = 31 and Herculiner = 28. The A-F grade per category allows people to choose based on individual criteria, but the numeric score provides a "best overall" value.
Regardless if you ever use this method, I definitely look forward to future test videos.
Great vid. I have a twenty year old Mac tool box, top is worn out from me throwing my tools on top of it and just plain old daily wear and tear. I was going to just repaint it. Did that 4 or 5 years back. I'll use the Plastikote instead. Thanks !
It seems like a terrific option! Great idea using it on the tool box!
You should test a bunch of different rust converters.. that would be a good video.
Great recommendation. I'll definitely do that soon.
I'd definitely like to see that myself!
Please do, I am needing to do some rust fixes on my Jeep.
Derek Straka +1
Derek Straka That's a really good idea and another worthwhile test.
Your channel is probably one of the most valuable and practical on TH-cam. Thank you for all your time and hardwork it takes to make your videos.
Wow, thank you!
@@ProjectFarm You are very welcome.
This really shows you the value of a factory bed liner.
Good Point!
I bought a TX Tacoma with an original Toyota-brand plastic liner. It's durable and looks good, especially for being a '98 commercially owned rig. Only one problem, the bed of my otherwise totally rust-free truck is rotted out under the plastic liner. Maybe the plastic liners seemed like a good idea when new. I thought that drilling drain holes on each end of the ribs might prevent the problem. Does anyone have any experience with this?
@@elultimo102 I'm dealing with the same rust issue with the plastic liner. I'm pretty much going to get rid of the plastic liner and go with a spray on. I can't think of any way to keep out the moisture when it's fully encapsulated. That said, I may go with the Plasticote after watching this video.
@@hugoparker1427 A previous owner put 1/8 steel sheet under the liner. It's holding, but I would like to find a bottom from a bashed-in bed and get it welded in, or cut out the rot and install a large & costly sheet of aluminum diamond-plate, or a good solid junkyard bed. (I have a camper shell on, so it will be even more trouble).
I wish I would have found this channel sooner. You are super informative, to the point, entertaining, and you consider things woth products that I never would like the sun exposure. Thanks for all the hard work you do.
Thank you!
You should do LineX vs Monstaliner vs Rhino Liner.
Great recommendation!
u-pol raptor liner as well. It's supposed to be one of the best diy bedliners out there.
I had a 500.00 Rhino liner in my '95 Ford for ten years and it held up great . I hauled scrap metal , pine logs and tons of brush . My friend got another brand and it turned to goo when he delivered an automatic transmission that spilled fluid about,. I think price may be a hindrance for this test though.
That contest is a mix of prograde and diy though. There are plenty of next level diys like Raptor and monster. I would be interested in seeing that competition.
vs Durabak (professional results from a DIY product)
One of the most thorough videos for the DIY consumer I have ever watched. Hands-down. This comparison reviewing had it all.
Thanks!
Like enamel, bedliners can still be off-gasing up to 30 days later (regardless of what the can directions say). I think the results could very well change if the test panels were left out for a month until full hardness had been reached.
Great point.
I agree, but in real life nobody is going to wait 30 days to use their truck beds after paint. This stuff should hold up after a day or two
If that's what you want, then use a 2K product. These are a lot harder, and reach their full hardness quicker.
audioh0lic - Scratching is all about the hardness level. I agree most people won't wait 30 days, however I'd bet most people aren't going to throw a bunch of bricks or scrap metal straight into their newly coated bed within the first week, either. It's going to be more typical stuff like boxes, ATVs, bags of mulch, kayaks, lumber, etc, that will be used in the first month. Odds are that it will be over a month before the first time you find that nail hidden under a big stack of lumber, try dumping gravel into the bed, or drop a tool box onto it.
Agreed!
I would love to see a rust converter like por15 tested. Also a undercoating test would be great.
Great test idea!
Yes... Please do an undercoating and rust sealer comparison. This is a battle I have been fighting on my trucks in the northeast for decades.
Absoluitley great idea I would love to see por15 tested against similar products and also a handful of popular undercoating products such as Eastwood, rust oleum rubberized (regular) & rust oleum rubberized professional, krown, fluid film, 3M professional rubberized & 3M rubberized regular, tested against each other. That would be an awesome video I know many people would benefit from!!
Por15 vs powder coat
partyman6666 fluid film.
Would love to see a comparison of the roll or brush on bed liners as I have had much better luck with those. Thanks as always for your incredibly informative and scientific videos
Thanks for the video idea.
That was a great showing of each product and test results , which will make it an easy choice for each person no matter climate or material handling . Awesome, thank you for your time in this presentation , well worth it. It sure will help save people money. Great job
Thanks and you are welcome!
I sprayed the bottom of my old fiberglass boat with the Rust-Oleum bedliner. It has held up surprisingly well for the last two years.
I've seen a lot of your videos and thoroughly enjoy them. But this one by far is my favorite!!!!
Thank you very much!
"Now that's a lot of damage"
Lafreniare will look great in red. Until he starts beating my blues lol.
@@MaxJ260 lol, not gonna happen without coaching changes
@@roccoseals7753 ahh ok well good luck to you guys!!!!
As soon as I heard it I laughed and went to the comments
@@pacostacos4270 same
I just got a 97 f250 crew cab short bed. Tons of stuff to fix and get working again but I am certainly using this video and others in my decision making process. Appreciate you brother. You are one of a kind.
South Texas hot and humid. Plastikote it is
Thanks and you are welcome!
Ear picks up "Warso" ..
Figured out finally..." we are also" haha.
Thanks for your efforts man, you deserve every subscriber and more.
Thank you so much 😀
As phil swift would say *”thats a lot of damage”*
lol
Project Farm we all wonder if you are making fun of him or if you just started saying that for no related reason :p
trey arnold You just gave me an idea. What if you used Flex Seal as a bedliner? Hmmm🤔
rebel just for kicks mind blown
I thought that Phil swift worked for the money store. Or is he the flex tape guy?
Would you want to do more then one coat? seems like 3 coats (since it's sprayed on) then start the testing would be the best way to do it.
Get it to at least 1/16” thick.
Heculiner painted on a Jeep frame and floor boards thick with a brush and roller has lasted me for 8 years so far. Apparently it works better as an undercoat than it does as a bed liner. Thank you for these videos. They are very helpful for us do it yourselfers
You are welcome!
Can you do all of these in the roll on version ? And don't forget Linex if you do.
Yes, great recommendation!
How about mixing two or three to get the best properties of both? What would a combined Plasti-kote + Ez-Liner do? (spray-on)
I agree I would like to see the DIY roll On comparison
@@ProjectFarm I know for the hurcliner they say that the spray is supposed to be for tuchups and for getting places you can't reach with the stuff from the can
I agree I use lineX and love it my step-dad had rhino liner.
I always use the rustoleum in the bed of my dump truck for places to stand so you won't slip and it holds up well when I dump things
Rustoleum hammered paint is the best stuff in a can for outdoor metal. Just read the reproductive harm warning
You made it very easy for people to choose. :-) Great video!
Thank you very much! Your channel is doing great! Thank you for all the excellent videos you're creating!
I would caution anyone choosing anything based on any one, single review. Great work done here, but sample size one, his conditions vs yours, product lot variance, phase of he moon, etc. Thanks - Lumpy
I live in Hawaii and you probably know , that we have many pickup trucks , so you answer all questions even more then I expected ! This information is very helpful ! Thank you !
You are welcome! Glad to hear!
Watched this whole video to find out they don’t make plastikote anymore 😢
Great video, as always. I think my takeaway from this one is: Either get it professionally sprayed (like my father in law did with his truck) or get a drop-in liner (like I did with mine). These rattle cans just don't seem up to it, and I suspect multiple coats would help, but still not be as reliable.
Thanks for the feedback.
The Rhino lining is quite thick and if my truck had not had a factory bed liner insert in it, I would have have definitely gone with it.
Dude you are the best. Are you a scientist or engineer? Your testing methodologies are always so exhaustive it’s amazing!
Wow, thank you!
Now that is how you do a comparison of consumer products, that was excellent thank you !
Thank you!
Not adding nothing new here but just wanted to say that I am changing the product I will purchase tomorrow for my Jeep based on your video. Thank you. Invaluable informative service, your channel is.
You are welcome!
Would be great to see something with brake fluid, like using it as paint remover, engine oil, etc..
Thanks for the video idea!
Good idea! Brake fluid can be used to swell rubber parts. It's useful to get rubber suspension bushings to stop squeaking. It might take some time, but it works. It can be used, using maybe an ounce or two into at least several quarts of oil, to swell the seals in engines to stop a rear or front main seal leak. Sometimes works with valve cover gaskets if they're the older style. It also eats away paint and attracts water to itself, causing all the parts saturated in it to rust quicker. It's hygroscopic, meaning water is attracted to it. Weird stuff.
Wow those test results were all over the place, hard to pick a favorite, I would have to vote for plastikote
Yes, some seem great for the cold and others for the hot weather. Plastikote seems to be the best all around.
Another suggested test: see if the liner will re-bond to the washers after having been soaked in the solvent. I assume if something spilled in your bed you wouldn’t go and wipe it off right away so this would test what happens after the solvent dries away
Great test idea!
Exactly what I need, an inexpensive method to spray that back of my 90 Ford F250. Don't need to spend hundreds of dollars, a few cans will work for me and a Saturday afternoon. Thanks for all your efforts in putting this together.
You are welcome! Thanks for the feedback.
Would love to see this test repeated after 3 coats. Love the channel, thanks for the GREAT non-bias reviews!
Great suggestion! Thank you
I would also. You obviously always do awesome with your tests. But if you tested one coat. At least 2. But. With that being said. It does show results. Helped me choose a product. It's neat to see the results between the products.
I'd love to see the advertised "High Friction" that these different brands advertised. Just to see how grippy they are depending on the material that's being tested on them as well.
Some might hold on to very flat surfaces better, while others might be better at holding on to material with an very uneven surface.
Thank you for the video idea!
A way that we used to make an anti-skid coating for a boat, steps, or the wing root area on a small aircraft where you step on it to get into the cockpit was to use flat black oil based paint, brushed on thickly, and then dusted with mason's sand while wet, followed by a lighter coat of paint when it dried.
Honestly I've made more product choices based on your reviews than anything else.
Tho this one, I'd have my bed done by Line-X every time.
Thank you!
I'd thought about doing my own bed liner but after watching this video, no way. None of these will hold up in the long run for anything heavier than a soccer ball or a sack of groceries. I'll stick with Line-X, professionally done. I've had outstanding results with Line-X in several trucks done over the years, and if you buy enough of this spray on crap to do all surfaces of the bed, sides, and tailgate to a thickness equal to what a professional shop would charge for Line-X, the cost for each would be close enough to go with the pro job. Thanks PF for yet another informative video that's saved me money!
Great video!
Thank you very much for the positive comment!
Love this channel, you are very informative and to the point with real world testing. Great job.
Thanks!
I know this is an old video, but the ultimate scratch test is a large ball of tangled barb wire, about 12lbs and drag it out. That is how you break in the bed of a new truck and get over the issue of scratching it.
Ba
Bahaha
I am sure this is alot of time consuming but I'm glad everyone appreciates your videos I remember the first set of videos made my day that someone would take their time to help the average joe and people that really appreciate their hard earned cash to not waste anything.
Keep up the work!!
Thanks, will do.
I've heard line x is the best. I've seen alot if testing with Line X. Can you please compare it to the others or do a part 2?
Great recommendation. Thank you
Also maybe Rhino Liner? It's more competition
just a vet linex is an A/B mixture, and is way better than these things. The mythbusters made a concrete wall bomb proof with some of it, no joke!
Kumquat Lord I agree. I thought I seen it in a spray can but I was wrong. I really want to see a test of shell V-POWER premium gas. Its a detergent/ lubricant fuel and claims to clean 60 percent of carbon build up with the first tank through your engine and lubricate. That's all I use and I really want to see if it's worth the extra money. I use mobile 1 annual protection, Motorkote, and a K&N filter. I've ran my car 7k miles now and my oil is still clear like it's brand new. My car has 150k miles on it. I really only try to use the best everything but I think I'm going to tear apart my lawn mower to see for myself if she'll has actually kept my engine clean.
Rhinoliner is the best...That's my bet
How about doing Rustoleum as bottom layer and PlastiKote as top layer? Do they mix together or do they get a chemical reaction?
I'm sure it would work fine once Rustoleum fully cured.
Line X is nice, but I prefer the finish texture of Rhino Liner.
evilreddog The plastic box on my 2013 beats them all. I think you’ll see more of that in different thicknesses for the different duty trucks. It’s lighter than metal and don’t need refinish cause they don’t rust.
Are you talking about a plastic liner?
Those tend to just rub the paint off and hide bed rust in my experience.
@@billybobjoe198 true but once spray on liner gets scratched to the metal all sorts of moisture will move in. We all know what happens after that
Flex tape as a bed iner? seems like a cool video
Thank you for the video idea!
Yeah thats what i meant. Its all the same stuff just differently produced
You are the best resource for any and all real life off the shelf products. Thank you very much
You are welcome!
I want to see brake cleaner vs carb cleaner. Unless you’ve done it already
Thanks for the video idea!
Jeff, for what application? As a solvent? As a fuel? As an oven cleaner?
Great idea, I always wonder what's the difference between the two, I mean when to use each of them.
As a solvent, I really want to see what kind of difference wal-mart or store brand and name brand brake cleaners up against store and name brand carb/choke cleaners. I seriously follow this channel and I’ve watched and learned a lot of things I really have wondered about, so I’m really glad somebody is out there doing this.
I've used duplicolor roll on liner before. I stopped using it because it's crap. It's practically ruined in the first week of use. If you spill a gas can, the whole bedliner will just melt away.
I used ezliner aerosol on my S10 pickup about 15 years ago. It was hard, but the surface was clumpy and uneven. It wasn't a grippy texture, more smooth and wavy. When it was hit or scraped hard, the top surface cracked to reveal hollow air pockets underneath. I was largely unimpressed.
The past few years, I've been using Raptor Liner spray in bedliner. The texture is great and it's pretty tough. I work in road construction and we use the beds and trailer decks very hard. I've seen some professional line-x liners that are very, very tough. Much better than the DIY stuff. It's not invincible, but i think I'll try the tintable Raptor liner to actually paint the exterior of my s10. It's an off-road truck so I'm not concerned about a flawless, deep glossy paint job.
Keep up the informational videos. I love them. 👍
Great test idea and thanks for the positive comment!
I think I might look into raptor bed liner as well. You said you have faith in it right? Because I'm going to be doing my entire Bronco in it and possibly the underside of my blazer which will be my off-road toy.
Thank you very much. P.s this video looks a lot of work involved,thank you keep them coming.
Thank you!
The Man....The Legend. Keep It Up... Pretty soon PF will the the only sign of approval fully trusted.
Thanks for the feedback.
“That’s a lotta damage!” -Phil swift -cover by projectfarm
lol
but does this compare to pro sprayed bedliner? do they use different chemicals? just wondering
Great point. I'll have to compare them.
the pro lining costs a lot and is more like a very thick epoxy. i have an f250 that previous owner rhino lined and it is super tough stuff
My dad got his 97 Chevy 2500 rhino lined in 99 and we still work out of it every day and there are only a few small spots missing
@mens B yes, i think its like pro spray paint, 2 pack type, is much tougher, perhaps also the bedliner is a much better product if its similar, it can be done by diy, if you can get it, but youd have to wear proper masks
Fr Cl
I‘d imagine you could use the flexible 2 component epoxy roofers use to seal ... everything.
It absolutely stinks for days, but once it‘s on a surface it‘s never coming off. Can’t even cut it with a knife yet it‘s somewhat flexible.
i love how much scientific testibg u put into these videos...great job
Thank you!
Scientific? Acetone is made to remove paints/coatings that ain’t scientific that’s just a setup
Forgot how about auto plastic paints.i tried rustoluem look great for well 5 months then started to fade now looks almost the hue and sheen when I started.
I like your videos almost scientific and real world combined.
Keep up the good work!!
Thanks, will do!
Let's not forget how nicely he does the music credits!
Thanks for watching.
so it seems that all the bedliners in a can are junk...
I'll test roll-ons in the future.
I'd also like to see if multiple coats make a difference and price to cover a full bed. square footage of coverage to price compared to roll-on and professionally coated.
cheeto4493 I used 1.5 gallons of Rustoluem roll on bedliner in a 6 foot Chevy Colorado bed. I did several thick coats on the bottom, using a sponge to finish and give it better texture. It's pretty tough stuff, but took about a month to fully cure
We’ve done a few roll on’s with average results. I’ll keep an eye out for your video. Curious to say the least.
@@ProjectFarm I think the 2 parts (like epoxy) cannot be matched by spray can solutions. Simple chemical limitations.
I would like to see what brand of tools are the best bang for the buck (craftsmen, dewalt, harbor freight, kobalt etc.) Anyways great video.
Great recommendation!
See: AvE BOLTR videos
I'm in the process of doing my 20 year old Tundra, and my experience of using Harbor Freight bed liner ( took it back cause it stopped up at nozzle immediately) and then went with Rustoleum. I agree with you the RUstoleum looks almost like black spray paint, and I like the texture of the Harbor Freight but reading other reviews suggests the products that give you more texture also clog up the spray nozzle .
Thanks for the feedback.
Do you think that the roll on varieties of bed liner will hold up better than the spray on kind?
I believe so. Great test idea!
In my experience it has but I'd love to see a video between the roll on ones as well as the spray on ones (that require a paint gun and air compressor)
E-Z liner spray is actually intended to touch up their roll on product. It actually holds up quite well.
Interesting didn't know that I've just used the Rust-Oleum on my bumpers and door panels and it just hasn't held up at all
In my experience, upol raptor spray has done the best for me and best looking finsh
Thank you for the recommendation
I CUT THIS TRUCK BED IN HALF
NOW THAT'S A LOT OF DAMAGE!
Phil swift here with FLEX TAPE
I now envented a spray flex seal
I very much liked your series of tests. I did not expect anything to hold up to acetone as was the case. I don't know what kind of liner spray was in my truck but it was amazing! It never scratched thru in either hot or cold weather, kept the finish, never chipped, and did experience some small spills of gasoline, diesel, and paint cleaning sprays. Obviously the chemicals were not allowed to stay on the surface but still it was impressive. However it was definitely not a "DIY" finish either. Hats off to a great demo.
Thanks!
I have used herculiner for several years. It rolls on alot thicker than it sprays. I have always rolled it on. The gloss finish goes away in about 3-6 months of sunlight and it looks the same as the others. For a do it yourself bedliner i will stick to herculiner, but if i was was trying to protect a nice truck bed i would probably go and have it sprayed with Linex.
Great recommendation.
You know youre early when you watch it in 360p
Wow! That's slow! I had a lot of delays with the video uploading today.
It’s fixed now
it stayed 360p for like an hour
Curious how the catalyzed bed liners would do against aerosol cans.
Your reviews are concise, informative, data-driven. For any reviews of any sort on TH-cam, you're a freakin superstar. I like Rustoleum on just the numbers alone, but Plastikote does look better upon initial application.
Glad you like them!
Why don't you try mixing a few of them, applying them one at a time and possibly combining their best qualities? This should be interesting to see.
Great video idea!
Exactly what I was thinking. Seems to me a base layer of Rustoleum and a top layer of Plastikote might be the best of both worlds.
Brilliant
Thank you so much for the testing and I am so glad that you now have Amazon link and you get credit for all my purchases.
You are so welcome!
Rumor has it that project farm reads all of the comments. Could it be true?
Yes, it is true. Thank you!
@@ProjectFarm lol! That's awesome. 👍
I tried arguing once , he replied Everytime. I was insisting on not replying
lol. There are many things that make TH-cam different than TV. Being able to interact with those creating the video seems to be a huge benefit. Also, we're "real" people just like everyone else. No celebrity status or big egos = interacting with viewers. Thanks again!
@@ProjectFarm how is the baking soda and superglue cylinder head comming?
Dude, I know when your video starts it's going to be a Like. You're that good.
I appreciate that!
i tried the rustoleum one for the frame of my scooter and it was very hard to get out of the can and flaked off easily
I like Plasticote the best. Seemed to go on and stick very well.
judging by the vid i probably didnt prepare the surface well enough, sandblasted but didnt clean it for oils afterward. plasticote does look very good too. thank you for the excellent test video once again
Thanks for the constructive feedback. Surface prep is the most important step.
Mens B key for thick spray paints is to have them shaken up well. I always keep them in a bucket of hot water.
They make a spray paint can shaker that fits onto a sawsall in place of a blade. It's awesome and saves me alot of pain from shaking vigorously for all that time.
People like you go straight to heaven without any judgement.
"Peter, for my sake, don't you know who that is?"
Oh lord while I was writing this I imagined him getting to Limbo and saying "Alright well, as you can see we've got a variety of afterlives to choose from, so let's get the testing underway"
Also you should start doing a control. like for this video use bare metal in some tests to show the products ability to absorb effects that would otherwise effect the metal.
Great point!
Too funny!! I went to look up Herculier reviews and found this video. Some of the other products I considered were also tested! Awesome video. Thank you!!
Thanks and you are welcome!
How about to radiator/head gasket stop leak fluids (yes, I'm posting my idea again lol)
Can't beat LineX
Thanks for commenting on LineX
HOW YOU BEAT LINEX IS WITH THE PRICE
Perhaps. My 1998 truck has a 20 year old LineX bed liner and it is still in good shape. The only issue I have had with it are on the edge of the tailgate and it was fixed under warranty. The stuff is sprayed on buildings to make it bomb proof and you can coat a cinder block with the stuff, toss it off of a 4 story building and it will internally shatter but the outside will stay intact. They have even coated the Pentagon with it. You kinda get what you pay for.
Always use a primer a good primer before putting on any bed liner make sure you send as much of the paint that you can off so it has something to stick to also always wait at least 24 hours between coats and I would recommend at least 4 coats of bed liner to have a true undestructable layer protecting your truck bed
Great point.
Magic stuff mate. I was in the market for a bed-liner. This convinced me just to get rubber matting ;-) You're a star, put in so much hard work! Keep it up!
Thanks, will do!