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Firewood, Heating and Wood Burning Equipment
What Do You Have For A Bed Liner In Your Truck?
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<blockquote data-quote="davec" data-source="post: 2190183" data-attributes="member: 36373"><p>Double Bingo. These are the 2 key problem with current bedliners. The drop in are slick as he77 ...which can be a good thing or a bad thing. It can be nice to slide heavy objects around, but then again, if you don't tie everything down, EVERYTHING slides around... But they take a lot of shocks that don't beat up the bed metal. Whereas the spray-ins are great for keeping stuff in place and tough as nails ....but the bed metal is basically right there to get mangled up.</p><p></p><p>Perhaps the perfect storm is a drop-in that has an anti-slip coating/layer on it? Maybe lay down a cheap spray on/roll on first to protect the bed from rust, then drop in the super-duper anitslip bed liner? I need to go start a business...</p><p></p><p>-Dave</p><p>(mine is drop in right now...)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="davec, post: 2190183, member: 36373"] Double Bingo. These are the 2 key problem with current bedliners. The drop in are slick as he77 ...which can be a good thing or a bad thing. It can be nice to slide heavy objects around, but then again, if you don't tie everything down, EVERYTHING slides around... But they take a lot of shocks that don't beat up the bed metal. Whereas the spray-ins are great for keeping stuff in place and tough as nails ....but the bed metal is basically right there to get mangled up. Perhaps the perfect storm is a drop-in that has an anti-slip coating/layer on it? Maybe lay down a cheap spray on/roll on first to protect the bed from rust, then drop in the super-duper anitslip bed liner? I need to go start a business... -Dave (mine is drop in right now...) [/QUOTE]
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