As long as head liners have been brought up, I do not know how many varieties there are in material, but one of them for 1970 was vinyl material, also attached to the molded head liner with a foam intermediate layer. The foam deteriorates and the head liner comes down. This can be re-attached in the following manner. By removing all of the molding around the tops of the windows the molded headliner can be removed out through the side windows of the car, this is a 1970 Javelin now, I do not know if an AMX has a vinyl head liner option. It does help in removing the headliner to first open all of the windows and I used a wide putty knife to help delaminate any glue that still retained the head liner to the roof of the car. The foam is not cleaned up from head liner or the vinyl. It is the foam that gives the texture to the vinyl. The head liner is then laid up side down on a flat surface, such as a drive way, in the sun. This might be over done in a southwestern state or an area such as Phoenix but in San Jose California I used my drive way on a sunny fall day. The vinyl material is carefully removed completely from the molded shell. Then a generic Spray Bottle is used mixing up a 50% solution of Elmer's Glue or equivalent wood working glue and water. It is now time to re-attach everything. By spraying liberally the molded shell and the back surface of the vinyl material the material is then worked back onto the shell. The heat from the sun will help keep the material flexible and the 50% mixture of Elmer's Glue and water will dry rather quickly holding everything together. Once everything had dried you can re-install the shell back into the car, by re-installing the window molding etc, the shell will be held in place. You do NOT want to use a 3M spray glue material for this project as it will dissolve the vinyl leaving an effect that is less than satisfactory. For those of you who are saying "Oh Yeah (Wink Wink) this will never work!!!!" That is the same reaction I had until 4 more guys said "yup, and it works fine too!" So I tried it almost 15 years ago. Works fine, lasts long time. If you just want to put up a small section peel back the vinyl or use a syringe to inject the 50% mixture of Elmer's glue into the bubble formed as things are coming apart and used a rolled up piece of cardboard wedged into the interior somewhere holding a pillow against the part of the head liner under repair. I do not think this would be a viable solution for a cloth head liner, but it will work well with vinyl. John _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com