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earl e rizer

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Posts posted by earl e rizer

  1. Good luck on your search. One of my favorites also, but virtually non-existent where I live, in Canada. We got the Canadian Pontiac version which was the Parisienne, and same body shell almost but on a Chevrolet chassis. So no Wide-Track. They are even rarer! Yes I still want one almost as bad as I want a 58 Parisienne.

  2. The frame, the frame, the frame. Use an ice pick and ball peen hammer. Repair/ welding shops used to have templates made to repair 65/66 Ford Merc. frames. Also if the car has air check the heater core. Its an all day job to replace on these cars so equiped. Non air cars are easy. On the 352 engines the exaust manifolds leak and have to be machined flat.

    My '66 Galaxie convertible had frame rot that had to be welded up twice to pass a safety check. That was in 1974!!! Of course I lived in Nova Scotia Canada where the salt air just dissolved those cars. Even the constant fog has a high salt content.:D

    The 352/ FE series warrants a removal of the valve covers to see how much gunk is in there. A common problem as I recall. If it looks gummy or shale in there you're in for a rebuild.

    I still admire the looks of the 7 Litre , hardtop or convertible. Gorgeous interiors far superior to Chevrolet in style and wear.

  3. Those VW ads were well known back in the day as being very clever and cutting edge.

    ala "Mad Men". Can you imagine the uproar it would cause today IF it ever made it past the "PC" police?

    There would probably be a "Occupy VW headquarters" movement as well as a retraining program for the copywriters or an all out firing!

    Just shows how much the world has changed since I was a kid.

  4. You're welcome. The car is painted to exact match of a factory brochure scheme. Most people don't believe that until they see the original(not a reprint) color brochure. The only thing that strayed from the "as factory built" is the material for the seat covers and rumble seat cover. It really stands out in a crowd. Oh yeah, The whitewalls are incorrect also.

  5. I was born in '55 and came of driving/ car buying age in the zenith of the "Muscle Car Era"

    I loved these cars and they were plentiful and cheap to buy used by the mid-'70's due to insurance and gas crisis. We didn't call them muscle cars then. Just "Performance' cars or hot rods. Muscle cars if I remember correctly was a term started by magazines, or people who weren't into cars. The term became more common by the early 80's when those cars were all but forgotten by most of the public.

    I bought a '69 Charger R/T that was a 426 Hemi car, with a 440 transplanted in the summer of '76 for around $1400-1600. A 1969 SS 396 Chevelle for even less. A '70 Torino Cobra 429 SCJ @ $1200. I was one of only a few guys crazy enough to want gas guzzlers at the time and ran them with bare bones insurance.

    When most of them were crushed by 1980-85 and young guys hated what was available to them is when I started hearing the term more often. Nostalgia started early for my generation I guess!

  6. I've owned a few SL's of that vintage (W107 i believe). The 380's are underpowered compared to the older 4.5's and the newer 5.6's. The cast iron 4.5 is a more durable engine than the aluminum 3.8. I had a 83 380 that was too slow for my tastes. Otherwise it was the same as the older ones I had. Check out the chassis for rust around the front suspension mounts as this was a weak spot on certain vintages. Also floor pan rust. Fuel pumps regularly pack it in, but no big deal. All 3 of mine were leakers, but that was mostly from not enough use and dried out seals. If it's cheap, they make a comfortable driver.

    The 380's also had a oil line problem with deteriorating. these are located under the cam covers and not a big deal to replace, but the old ones can fall apart and clog up passages. I did mine in an afternoon along with a few beers.

  7. The picture in my avatar is of a 29 Pontiac that was still in the barn when i snapped it. It had been driven there in 1954. I bought it and a 37 Olds. I wish I could post more pic's but they were on a hard drive that crashed and is now gone.

    I wish i could find the pic's of a 69 Chrysler 300 convertible that was in the lower floor of a barn and had quite the small piles of wood dust covering it from the termites that had been chewing on the beams above it. Nice even rows!

    The barn next to it contained a fleet of 1920's & 30's cars that the owner wouldn't let me photograph. A customer of his put them there over 40 years ago and still paid up storage every January but never even came to look or tinker with them.

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