I was wondering what the general consensus was on using adhesion promoter on '69 Mustang interior parts. I'm finishing up the interior restoration on my '69 Mach. It's a white interior with the fixed rear seat. All of the panels are original Ford pieces, but I had to buy two used sail panel trim pieces since my originals were broken and disintegrating. These two used pieces are green, and I need to paint them white. I'd really hate to paint everything white and have it chip or fleak off the first time anyone rides in the back seat area.
So far, I've removed all of the original paint using Easy Off oven cleaner. The large interior quarter panels are down to the bare fiberglass, but I've held off on using the Easy Off on the smaller panels because I didn't know what they were made of. Is all of the rear seat area trim on a non-fold down car fiberglass, or is it a mixture of fiberglass and plastic?
I read the article in the latest Mustang monthly about using adhesion promoter on plastic interior pieces, but I'm not sure if this applies also to fiberglass panels. Is there any reason to use adhesion promoter (like SEM's Sand Free) on fiberglass? Adhesion promoter aside, I don't want to remove the grain in the panels--do I simply scuff them with a gray or red scuff pad, or should I be using a certain grit of sandpaper?