Hello, I have a T5 Roadster and I wanted to know the best strategy for finishing off the top of the front door seal. I believe the roadster has some unique curves and angles here vs. even a Cabriolet, so any pictures are much appreciated. Pictures of this exact area are hard to come by. I'm not super concerned if it's 100% original, just want to to be a satisfactory solution as I glue the new ones on.
In this random example I found of a restored car that was up for sale, it looks like the person just sort of made a messy slice-and-smash approach. I guess that could work. As I am lining up my seal, I see if you cut it short, you end up with incomplete coverage and you could see body-colored metal at the top. If you make it stick up long, you end up having to smash (like the pic below) or something. I was considering making some fine razor blade cuts as I approach the top of the door and glueing the resulting pieces down as I go. (remove pie-wedge pieces basically to allow it to "fold and collapse" onto the door metal at the top). (click for huge version)
Here's another random pic I found. It's also not shot from a great angle, but it looks like the front seal sticks up like a mohawk. But looking at my door, that would seem to make a scoop that would funnel water inside the door - worse than having no seal at all maybe? Plus, I can't imagine this looks great when viewed from the top or outside of the car. (click to make it bigger)
Here's another found on Autos Intl's site. This is a work in progress so this may not be the final shape, but it looks like they're doing sort of a bend-and-smash with glue type approach
Some pictures would be awesome if you have any. I'm just looking for a "nice" install - doesn't have to necessarily be concourse-judge-approved haha.
Maybe this falls under the category of "if it looks good to you, then it's good"?
Thanks so much for any pictures you can attach!
Brian
In this random example I found of a restored car that was up for sale, it looks like the person just sort of made a messy slice-and-smash approach. I guess that could work. As I am lining up my seal, I see if you cut it short, you end up with incomplete coverage and you could see body-colored metal at the top. If you make it stick up long, you end up having to smash (like the pic below) or something. I was considering making some fine razor blade cuts as I approach the top of the door and glueing the resulting pieces down as I go. (remove pie-wedge pieces basically to allow it to "fold and collapse" onto the door metal at the top). (click for huge version)
Here's another random pic I found. It's also not shot from a great angle, but it looks like the front seal sticks up like a mohawk. But looking at my door, that would seem to make a scoop that would funnel water inside the door - worse than having no seal at all maybe? Plus, I can't imagine this looks great when viewed from the top or outside of the car. (click to make it bigger)
Here's another found on Autos Intl's site. This is a work in progress so this may not be the final shape, but it looks like they're doing sort of a bend-and-smash with glue type approach
Some pictures would be awesome if you have any. I'm just looking for a "nice" install - doesn't have to necessarily be concourse-judge-approved haha.
Maybe this falls under the category of "if it looks good to you, then it's good"?
Thanks so much for any pictures you can attach!
Brian
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