Im kinda late in the game here...
If you are at all interested in doing this yourself, there is an exceptional product out there called Monstaliner....
http://www.monstaliner.com/
Dont let the 'weirdness' of the product name or website fool you. This stuff is serious. A few years ago I scuffed and covered a Toyota 4 Runner with this stuff.
This was a trail rig that I was tired of seeing all scratched up. Its a roll on application that is cured by the humidity in the air. What made me think of it was the mention of bedliner and my experience with this VS a rhinolining I had put into another truck. The Monstaliner set up with a relatively slick surface despite it being textured. I believer there is a way to reduce the texture even more but I dont remember how.
Its put on with a roller, so doing the inside of a dump trailer would be a breeze.
If you are at all interested in doing this yourself, there is an exceptional product out there called Monstaliner....
http://www.monstaliner.com/
Dont let the 'weirdness' of the product name or website fool you. This stuff is serious. A few years ago I scuffed and covered a Toyota 4 Runner with this stuff.
This was a trail rig that I was tired of seeing all scratched up. Its a roll on application that is cured by the humidity in the air. What made me think of it was the mention of bedliner and my experience with this VS a rhinolining I had put into another truck. The Monstaliner set up with a relatively slick surface despite it being textured. I believer there is a way to reduce the texture even more but I dont remember how.
Its put on with a roller, so doing the inside of a dump trailer would be a breeze.