When I refurbished the interior living area in the summer of 2010 I did it in a hurry. The hurry was because of a self-imposed deadline for beginning a 7000+ mile trip to the East Coast and back again. Even though both doors had areas where the plastic laminate was not stuck to the aluminum frame I patched what I could with some new contact cement and skinned over the dark laminate with a real maple wood veneer also using contact cement. When we left on August 1st we headed east and everything looked great for quite a while but, once we hit the humidity of the East the wood veneer expanded and buckled. I have been trying to get around to it since returning from that trip. Now is the time.

The doors are made from an aluminum frame, skinned on either side with a Formica-type plastic laminate, and filled with a few blocks of particle board in strategic spots and expanded corrugated cardboard in the rest of the interior space. My plan was to remove either the veneer or the entire exterior of the doors depending on what worked. I had purchased enough new laminate (WilsonArt makes a natural maple plastic laminate that is a good match for real natural maple coated in polyurethane) to re-cover both doors so, when we returned from our last trip I removed the doors from the GMC and got started.

It turned out that the exterior laminate on both doors was loose enough to get off using a large paint scraper type of putty knife and a hammer (see the photo) with some gentle tapping. In one case the corrugated filler was completely loose and in the other it was stuck to the interior skin so I didn’t have to remove it. In that same case the interior skin was also loose enough to require re-gluing so I had to completely disassemble the door.

I cleaned the aluminum frame with a sander, added plywood pieces to the interior of the door where reinforcement was needed (towel racks on the bathroom door and a full length mirror in the closet) and reassembled everything using DAP non-flammable contact cement (I think it is better than the original one) everywhere. My only error was that when I reassembled the door that was completely disassembled I put it together with a slight twist to it. It still closes but that was not too bright.

Here are some photos that might be helpful: