We boiled them in a small pan of water which we carried to the truck, pair of tongs, and quick hands and they went right on. Not much science that we had.
good one^^^ hafta remember that. First set I put in I took the pedals apart. Granted, it needed bushings, so it wasnt the end of the world, but thats much easier!!
ok i was looking for another part and found where we put these so think i want to get this done finaly so boil em in soapy water, flat side goes up,they go under the floor, now do i disasemble the pedals or slide em over the foot pads?
how the heck did you get em over the pedals i boiled em and lubed the pedal and they just do not want to stretch, they are new from one of the 2 main dealers
Over the years on this and prior boards this project has always been an issue. When I finally did mine about two years ago I was filled with trepidation having read all the horror stories...I was shocked when they stretched and went on easily...I had figured on a long afternoon and it was over in less time than it took to heat the water. And if memory serves they came in a box with an FSN so I assume they were NOS not repros
So now I am wondering if there is a difference in the quality/rubber compound from different sources that makes some of the pads seem to go on easily and some be virtually impossible.
I can remember some people recommending cutting the pad putting it on then re-gluing it with some 3M Maritime sealer
If leather I'd becareful of boiling them in water....you'll cook the leather making it brittle. I own a leather business so I hope I have some knowladge of this...
I think they're neoprene or some other synthetic rubber. My truck doesn't have them, so I can't say for sure. I doubt that I'll replace them, actually.
They are made of rubber, boil them at least 10 mintes after the water comes to a boil. WASTE no time getting them on the pedals once removed from the heat, they cool fast getting too cool to work in a short time. Spraying the pedal foot pads with a good coating of aerosol silicone such as "Lubricone" from KANO Labs helps also. This chemical sprays on wet, but dries in minutes leaving a good silicone film that you don't see. A heated draft pad slides easily over the foot pad.