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Where do you find those? Do they get put on with an epoxy?
Idk I feel with those dash caps once it's on you'll be able to tell the dash really has a cap on it because of the fitment with all the other dash trim..
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^^^ I agree with "better than nothing".
My plans are to remove the dash, reinforce and epoxy the cracked areas, then wrap it with a padded vinyl of matching color and grain. I'd probably wrap the thin piece up by the windshield, too.
If I can find a wrecked truck being parted out, I'd like to get a dash from that and fix/wrap it so I can just swap it in. It'll give me more time work on it and minimize my Tahoe's down time. I don't wanna be rushed with forming the vinyl to all those compound curves and the epoxy will need time to cure.
Sounds like a lot of work, but will look as if nothing happen. I think someone had posted this repair on YouTube, but can't seem to find it.
I saw a video where they used special staples that are heated by a gun and melted into the plastic to join the cracked halves together. Then they used stainless metal strips from old wiper blades to reinforce the crack-prone areas and squirted a bunch of epoxy on them to prevent future cracking. The cracks on the surface were barely noticeable. I'm sure I could get away with doing this. But, I don't wanna take it all apart, fix the cracks, then be bothered by seeing the hairline cracks that were repaired. Or worse, new cracks form elsewhere. I could go ******* on reinforcing the underside so it won't crack anywhere and maybe add a thin layer of epoxy to the topside of the cracked areas. I wouldn't have to worry about the appearance since I'm wrapping it in vinyl. It'd be a one-and-done deal.
A lot of work? Maybe. But better than removing the dash more than once and I'd never have to worry about it again. Plus the backed vinyl will have a softer, flexible feel to it rather than the hard molded plastic shell that's there now.