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It comes with a bed liner. someone was saying that the liner leaks and under that my truck bed is getting rusty.
But I don't see it without going to the trouble of removing it to see has anyone else had a problem with their truck bed leaking? I have a bunch of stuff in there and ?

2007-05-14 11:11:14 · 10 answers · asked by Steven 6 in Cars & Transportation Car Makes Ford

10 answers

The only way the bed will rust is if you had the bed liner installed at a later date, after you have scratched the bed of the truck and removed the paint from the bed it will rust out. If the bedliner came with the truck from the factory and has never been removed you won't have to worry about rust. I would recommend spending the money and getting it rino-lined though, as those slide in bed liners aren't very good, and they will eventually crack and start coming apart.

2007-05-14 14:25:26 · answer #1 · answered by Bill S 6 · 1 0

Bed liners are not waterproof, water comes in around the end of the bed liner and where the tie down hooks are, with the way beds on the new f-150 you would have to keep that truck for about 30 years before you have any problems most people don't keep their vehicles that long. If it bothers you that much maybe a line X spry in liner.

2007-05-14 11:20:40 · answer #2 · answered by mrniceguy200022 1 · 0 1

Liners can create moisture underneath. This can create some problems relative to rust if not checked on a regular basis. I own a fleet of Ford trucks. I have found that a spray on liner is the only way to go. It also increases resale value.

2007-05-14 11:16:52 · answer #3 · answered by redranchtexas 2 · 0 0

Newer trucks have holes pre-drilled in the bed for drainage. Rust was a problem in the 80's and 90's, not now. If you are worried about it, pull the liner and get a spray liner installed. They stick to the bed and seal it.....no rust problems.

2007-05-14 11:20:13 · answer #4 · answered by mybuttstinks2001 5 · 1 0

Many bedliners leak. You can have a problem with rust if you have a bed liner. To avoid this problem, you can drill holes in your bed to let water drain out. Or, take out the bed liner. Now, if you like the bed lined, and you can afford it, try a rhinoliner. They look good, and it protects your bed. But, it is expensive.

2007-05-14 11:15:11 · answer #5 · answered by Zuker 5 · 0 1

The bed of the truck won,t unless you damage the paint or clear coat good luck

2007-05-14 16:03:48 · answer #6 · answered by JT B ford man 6 · 0 0

A 2000 Ford f 350, 7.3 Diesel, one hundred twenty,000 miles, great cab, long mattress, No scratches or dents, suitable indoors. computerized tranny Will grant extra suitable milage than the others and probable outlive them. 6.0L became into situation plagued. 6.4L has fairly extra suitable reliability than the 6.0L yet additionally a much extra complicated emission gadget that makes use of extra beneficial gasoline interior the regen cycle; early "flamethrower-from-the-exhaust" issues related to this have been ironed out...

2016-11-03 22:29:02 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Fix Or Repair Daily
Found On Road Dead

so ur f150 has a small back bed huh? as opposed to the front and side beds? bo but really. go get a rhino lining or something. and next time get a nissan titan or a toyota tundra

2007-05-14 11:14:54 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 4

get a rhino liner

2007-05-14 11:19:40 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

so...

2007-05-14 11:13:32 · answer #10 · answered by samdesign78 6 · 0 1

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