I just realized I never uploaded my FINISHED San Jose Firewall Pad! Sorry, I thought I had! I did this months ago now.
Helps to have a BEFORE/AFTER set! To summarize, First, Using a very soft bristle brush, (I used one from a vacuum cleaner attachment) I scrubbed the hell out of this thing! Wash, dry, repeat till it looks clean. (then let dry completely in the sun) I then very carefully "skinned" the old facing from the rodent urine-soaked jute backing. (gloves and a mask) Take your time, this "skin" tears very easily, you can make more work if you hurry. I repaired all of the tears and rips with the fiberglass mesh and adhesive. This seemed to take forever because I would fix ONE place and wait 1 day to move on. I sectioned in any missing areas with a donor San Jose pad, making every attempt to align the pattern wherever possible. I then bought a reproduction "cheapie" pad from either NPD or Virginia Classic (I could look into that and edit~ not sure it matters) and also skinned the rubber facing from the new pad. The jute fit really good from the section to the LEFT of the steering column with minimal effort. The section on the other side failed miserably. I needed to stretch it to fit the contours of the cowl panel and yet reach all the way across. Then, while holding the jute against the firewall, slowly 3M spray adhesive the jute and repaired "skin" together, all the while forcing as much contour into the new jute. (very tricky~ helps that the car is on a rotisserie and I stood the car on it's drivers side) After the old skin was glued to the new jute, I had some filler work on the jute to fill in where it came up short in spots. That is when I was able to see it beginning to take shape.
Some other pointers:
1.) I used long lag screws coming from the engine bay through the firewall where the fuse panel screwed in to keep that aligned before gluing the two halves together.
2.) Similarly, for the factory holes where the push-pins hold the firewall pad in, I used inch and a half by 1/4" bolts with nuts on them, tightened in before hanging the jute and before gluing the halves together, this kept the holes lined up as I moved along.
3.) As I said, I worked SLOWLY to bring the skin to the jute. After an initial test fit DRY (no glue) I glued ONLY THE AREA BEHIND THE FUSE PANEL AREA FIRST, leaving the rest seperated (unglued) and took the partially glued section inside of the car (still on the rotisserie) and hung it on all of those screws and bolts.I began by spraying both sides (backside of skin, face of jute) with the 3M spray adhesive. Once I felt it looked like it would take shape, I seperated the skin down, leaving the jute hanging from the screws and bolts and going about 6 inches at a time till I got to where the heater hoses went through. At that point, I just shot the glue the rest of the way and went for broke.
4.) Once the glue had set up a day, I cleaned the now refurbished old skin surface one last time. (toothbrush & mild soap, blotting with a rag) and let dry in the sun.
5.) NOW is when I began using the "Right Stuff" to fill cracks and remaining "issues"
6.) NOTHING was used afterwards, the "satin-shine look" is natural after the extensive cleaning along the way