The drop in bedliner that came with my truck from the dealer has outlived it's time. It warps in the sun and half of the screws are gone. What's everyones favorite DIY roll on bedliner?
No. One gallon. I saying in order to get a 3:1 value line x VS herculiner. You better get the line x for 240....which isn't going to happen.Zone said:So, you bought 3 gallons of Herc? Is that correct?
Those numbers may look great on paper but they aren't realistic. I'm an engineer so I see those type of assumptions everyday.Zone said:Herculiner is 72% solids by weight which is about 50% solids by volume. That means that out of one gallon of Herc, 50% is actual bedliner product and 50% are solvents that evaporate away. Professional bedliners such as LINE-X, Rhino, etc. spray in about 8 gallons (solvent free) in as short bed. So, to get the same from Herc, you would need to by about 16 gallons of Herc which is about $1,600.
Regarding Fisger8new's comments: Standard LINE-X (as well as most Rhino products) is an aromatic product meaning that it can lose its pigment due to UV light from the sun. They do NOT become brittle or lose any other attributes. Aliphatic products (LINE-X Premium, LINE-X Platinum, LINE-X Ultra, Rhino SolarMax) are UV protected and will hold their pigment much longer. Herculiner is aromatic and loses it color WAY faster than the other aromatic products mentioned above.
Yeah. Still not real world data. There's more than paperwork involved in real world data. Not a lab in Pennsylvania.Zone said:OK, correction: $79.99 x 16 gallons = $1,279.84 (+ tax) for Herculiner. By the way, the technical data is via ASTM standardized test methods. Since you're an engineer, I thought I would mention that.