Got my order in for 3 spools/reels @ $25 each and $11 shipping from different place.
https://www.activeforever.com/latex...qXpPIHjvrdEcBO9lqI_qTxsq_PqvqVsxoCHKIQAvD_BwE
Got the front passenger door completed before the rains hit.
I ended up using silicone spray on this one after trying a couple of failed options.
Still took more time than I liked.
Next ones should go a little faster. Another person helping will be a +.
The tubing is the type used for slingshots. Stretches easily. Slides onto cleaned coax pretty easy and binds onto it great.
I used a piece of #59 coax cable to fish the tubing thru the gasket slot cut about 3' longer than the weatherstrip laid out on work area.
Took me about 3-4 hours on this as I was testing lubes to use. I did not try wire pulling lube which may have worked but did not have on hand. The silicone spray lube was the best that I had on hand.
Could not have used the baby powder since I did not have a device to conveniently get it inside the weatherstrip.
Removed weatherstrip from opening & had to cut at fusion weld that is under threshold cover, laid out on driveway (after clearing work spot) & straightened as much as possible.
Measured 3' longer than weatherstrip (removed), sprayed (with tube in nozzle) silicone spray in the
'Air Escape holes' on the weatherstrip to fully lubricate inside.
Put a piece of #88-3M tape on end of coax to keep from piercing foam weatherstrip compression tube & slowly fed into weatherstrip out other end, spraying silicone spray in 'AE Holes' a head of the coax.
When coax has exited other end about 1' , I removed 3M tape & cleaned 6" of coax with alcohol to remove silicone spray and fed the tubing onto the coax cable (which does fit tightly) to pull back thru weatherstrip.
My tubing is on a roll so I unrolled about 10' at a time, pulling it thru the weatherstrip, lubing it with silicone spray & in the 'AE holes' as needed. The old turns/curves on the weatherstrip really created problems during the last 3' of the pull as the tubing would bind on the inside of the weatherstrip. Kept spraying the lube and made sure I had about 1 to 1-1/2" of tube and coax that would stay on outside of weatherstrip.
Before I cut the tubing from the roll, I worked the weatherstrip from one end to the other, looped the weatherstrip and cut tubing so that I could feed onto other end of coax using it as a connector for the tubing.
INSTALLING:
I started at bottom since there is a cut-out for threshold panel & using a rubber mallet, started to the left side, up the opening to the top left curve, using the mallet, bumping/bottoming the weatherstrip as I went around the opening.
I ended up with about 1/4" space where the weatherstrip ends meet under the threshold panel that I will probably silicone later when i do all the doors & is warmer.
Test drove on expressway & No more whistle from that door. Will do all doors in future.
Pulled the rear hatch seal to check out but rear hatch will be a real experience or will replace later. That baby has been pressed in for a while. Have to reseal mounting grip to reinstall since it had leaked before.
Will post any problems during finish of 'Repair' later.