Good afternoon, Alfred,
Although I'm just getting around to answering your post, I have been working on my hardtop a little. I also spent two days trying to get my car out of a snow bank. I was late for a meeting and, without looking carefully, reversed out of my garage into a bank of snow that had slid off of my home's aluminum roof. We get about 300 inches per year here. Inertia carried the car into the snow bank enough to high-center the car. It then froze solid as it got darker and colder. Near the end of the next day, I surrendered and called a tow truck.
Back to the hardtop. I had already installed the aluminum strip and mini-headliner to the main headliner but had not glued either. I trust your experience and good advice so I disassembled it and glued the mini-headliner to the aluminum strip, using small nails as guide pins for the screw holes during the gluing process. It looks good.
Next, I'll pinch the main headliner to the aluminum strip and mini-headliner by hand to restretch the main headliner and glue it to the hardtop. It looked good before. It should work as well or better with glue.
My comment about leaks was in regard to a previous question that I had deleted about leak risks with the combination of chrome trim, caulking or putty, headliner material, and contact cement layered one on the other when putting the hardtop together. Maybe I'll understand how it all works and why it doesn't leak, if it doesn't, when I've finished putting it back together. It had nothing to do with the aluminum strip. I forgot to delete it.
I agree with your truism comment. I deserved it.
Thanks for the headliner advice. I think I might survive this project.
Tom Kizer