jdmartin
Ram Guru
OK, as promised in another thread here's my post on putting on the Rough Country wheel well liners. I paid $98 shipped for these from Rough Country. They came zip tied together without a box. The only hardware was two push pins and a set of instructions that were marginally useful.
First thing is to completely take out the bolt that goes from the partial liners into the frame area. All other bolts can be left on the truck. Once that bolt is out, loosen up all the bolts along the wheel well. If you have a mudflap - I have Huskys I think - that has to come off.
Now take the liner and stick it into place in the wheel opening. There's cutouts in the liner that go around all those bolts you loosened up. Get the liner into the right general area and start pushing the liner behind the rim of the wheel opening. This is the hardest part because it's a tight fit. I started from the rear and worked my way around, but it might be easier to start in the middle. At the front bottom, where the trim piece is bolted into place, the liner is too long to go behind that piece and it wouldn't look right as best as I can see anyway, so I let that little lip hang over the bolt for that trim piece. I may just trim that part of the liner away later. Once you have the liner all the way behind the lip, get the front hole at the frame lined up and start that bolt, then get the rear hole lined up and push the pushpin in, then tighten all the bolts (and put your mudflap back on if you have one).
Overall it took me about 25 minutes start to finish per side. They look good and added bonus I noticed a little less rear wheel noise driving with the liners in.
First thing is to completely take out the bolt that goes from the partial liners into the frame area. All other bolts can be left on the truck. Once that bolt is out, loosen up all the bolts along the wheel well. If you have a mudflap - I have Huskys I think - that has to come off.
Now take the liner and stick it into place in the wheel opening. There's cutouts in the liner that go around all those bolts you loosened up. Get the liner into the right general area and start pushing the liner behind the rim of the wheel opening. This is the hardest part because it's a tight fit. I started from the rear and worked my way around, but it might be easier to start in the middle. At the front bottom, where the trim piece is bolted into place, the liner is too long to go behind that piece and it wouldn't look right as best as I can see anyway, so I let that little lip hang over the bolt for that trim piece. I may just trim that part of the liner away later. Once you have the liner all the way behind the lip, get the front hole at the frame lined up and start that bolt, then get the rear hole lined up and push the pushpin in, then tighten all the bolts (and put your mudflap back on if you have one).
Overall it took me about 25 minutes start to finish per side. They look good and added bonus I noticed a little less rear wheel noise driving with the liners in.