Hi Pakwheelers...This is the courtesy of an experienced guy.I would have done same but i am lazy enough but enjoy nice looking and mostly nice sounding custom tweeter pods.
If you guys feel it is good then request the mods to make it stickyyyyyy.I will upload also basics to fiberglassing.
These were so quick, cheap and easy to do.
On with the pics.......
First I cut the holes out to slightly sink the tweeter cups in.
Drilled loads of holes to make it easier. (using a soldering iron with a hot knife attachment would have been easier or if you have circular saw of exact diameter)
Returning the pillars to the car, I aimed the tweets then hot glued the cups in place. Hot glue guns are as cheap as a fiver from woolworths.(i think they are available in PAK also)
Stretched some old speaker grill cloth over the entire pillar. This is to get the contour of the build and the basis to apply the resin. Don't pull it too tight around the tweeter cup as it needs to have a nice long flow along the pillar.
The cloth is stapled at the back to hold in place. ( hot glue would probably been better, I found just stapling it worked ok.)
Cover the entire pillar, making sure the edges are pulled in tight.
No fancy fiberglassing gear, just a tin of resin and hardner from halfords. The spray glue is for applying the finishing material for the build. (fiberglass resin should be available from any big hardware store but i am not sure about spray adhesive but you can always used samad bond)
Apply One coat of the resin to the whole build. When it's cured but still sticky, (approx 1 hour) give the build another coat. Another one after that wouldn't hurt either... I gave mine just the two, it was strong enough.
Once the glassings completed and the builds are fully cured, you need to sand the shiny glaze back, remove any slight bumps and trim the edges off. Also cut the hole for the tweeter.
Make sure it's all smooth and flowing nicely into the cup. I chose to remove the backs from the cups so I could mount some foam behind the tweeter. When the final covering goes on, it's a tight push fit.
Here's the covering material I used, It has a foam backing and sticks well with the spray glue or samad bond.
Pic to show the trimming from the rear. The material doesn't need to be stretched over the build, but start form the center and work your way out. Spray glue the edges and wrap around it.
Make a X cut over the tweeter cup, fold and glue the material in. When previously sanding around the cup, allow for a tight push fit of the tweeter with the final covering in place.
Completed...