When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.
Same idea...........if you have floor mats in your truck
kinda....except the bedliner is there to protect my investment. so really, adding a rubber bedliner on top would really be more like having floor mats on top of your floor mats...
kinda....except the bedliner is there to protect my investment. so really, adding a rubber bedliner on top would really be more like having floor mats on top of your floor mats...
Agreed.
Glad the shop manned up, let us know how the hauling goes.
kinda....except the bedliner is there to protect my investment. so really, adding a rubber bedliner on top would really be more like having floor mats on top of your floor mats...
wow this is getting confusing
If you buy the rubber mats as an option with your truck, you do get floor mats for your floors mats
Your product is based on low pressure So that ,According to truck daddy your product is not good.But I have spray on bedliner and it works well.
Show me your truck picture.
Your product is based on low pressure So that ,According to truck daddy your product is not good.But I have spray on bedliner and it works well.
Show me your truck picture.
I looked back through the thread and I can't find where I said that, so maybe you misunderstood something.
Your a Qwikliner dealer and you are same person as psmith012. Why do you have multiple identities on this forum?
I have had different new trucks with all 3 of the main liners listed in this thread. Here are my observations: had a white color matched liner of which I have no idea what brand, and didn't like it due to staining of the white liner itself by dark stuff or blood after hunting, which did not completely wash out.
I had a scorpian, which after use showed the product had slightly worn off exposing little blue specs of plastic which looked like shredded wally world bags mixed in with the product for bed traction.
Had a rhino lining and it was tuff as nails, no scrapes or gouges and I liked the texture and look for the first 3 yrs or so, but it started to fade and look gray instead of black.
have a line-x currently, 3 yrs old, and tuff as nails, no fade yet, but I liked the overall appearance of rhino better before it started to fade.
its a crap shoot boys... see what you like, get what you like and hopefully you will not have to worry about warranties and all that. I have no huge prefference as of yet but would stick with either the rhino or line-x. Hope this was a fair critique. ladd out.
I went and looked at spray in liners yesterday and I think the brand was Armathane. They do colors and I have a white truck but they suggested I stay away from white as they said it tends to yellow with age, which makes sense to me. I'll go with black, just not sure which brand. I dont believe we have a Line-X, Rhino or any of the other name brands here in Springfield, MO.
Armorthane is a 100% polyurethane product. It's fairly soft and has a very low tear and tensile strength. (LINE-X literally has more than double the tear strength of Armorthane.) If you decide to get Armorthane, be sure to get any UV protection option they offer because polyurethane does not hold on to pigment very well.
The closest LINE-X dealer to you is in Osage Beach which is a pretty good drive! LINE-X in white does not fade or turn yellow.
Rezvani's Latest Post-Apocalytic Monster Is a Ford F-150 Raptor Underneath
Slideshow: Called the Fortress, the 850-horsepower pickup combines Raptor underpinnings with military-inspired features, survival equipment, and a starting price of $285,000.