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Jim Cannon

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Posts posted by Jim Cannon

  1. 5 hours ago, Dundee said:

    So Jim the plate just has a D without number is that normal?? I have an electric antenna however the body work has seen the hole gone so not sure I want to reinstate it anyway and I am not so interested for radio with too much talk… not my priority in any case. Those prices seem expensive for the day!!

    Yes, the D on the data plate is all Fisher Body needed to know at the body building stage, so that they would supply a body with an antenna hole in the fender.

     

    The actual radio and the manual or electric antenna was installed later, per the build sheet.

     

    Yes, those prices were high.  That AM-FM radio cost the equivalent of $1712 in 2022 dollars. This was early in the days of fully transistorized radios in cars (instead of radios with vibrators and tubes). They charged a premium for them.

     

    Detroit's business model was to have a "low" base price and then run the proce up with options.  A/C is pretty common now as standard equipment (at least in the USA) but in 1963 it added 10% ($430) to the base price of the Riviera, equal to $4,110 in 2022 money. 

     

    The base price of the '63 Riv today would be $41,440.  This car had no options.  Add things we take for granted today in a "personal luxury car", like electric windows, A/C, power seat, seat belts, drivers side mirror, cruise control, tinted glass, etc. and you would quickly be looking at a car price of $55,000 or more. Plus "tax, title and license".

     

    • Like 2
  2. The radio choices and cost for 1963 were:

     

    image.png.49aee45453c5bfc13a003810639daae9.png

     

    RadioOptionsonDealerOrderForm.png.3910855928bb124ed7488e746411c59a.png

     

    FM Radio was new technology in 1963.  Big cities would have 1 or 2 FM stations broadcasting, often playing classical music (because the sound was so much better than on AM radio).  Not too many people would pay for that extra feature.  But if you did, it included an electric antenna.

     

    I have a restored AM-FM radio in my car. I also have a AUX feed jack run into it to play from any source I want, like my phone or an MP3 player. Our radio here in the mountains is poor and drops out a lot. I mostly listen to an MP3 player with the top 100 hits of 1963 on it.

     

     

    • Like 1
  3. Carefully remove the dash pad and access the wires from above.

     

    You can convert the movement to a quartz clock movement that looks really good (and original).

     

    I have seen tachometers there and, if done right, they look good there.

     

  4. 12 hours ago, XframeFX said:

    Thanks for the tips. I did try to inspect Idle needle screw seats down the holes a while back. Maybe the screws were turned in hard in my carburetor's past. I always turn them in lightly closed as part of adjusting. Condition of seats was inconclusive.

    I'm reverting back to the AFB as the problem after trying all else. Just want to change out assemblies at this point. Will look out for a Q-Jet and intake over the winter. Failing that, an Edelbrock #1411.

     

     

    Get another good AFB that is jetted for the '63 401 with Dynaflow. Don't get an Edelbrock.

     

    • Like 1
  5. 9 hours ago, Daniel Glass said:

    What is a L bracket. Don’t u mean a piece of angle. I have re run my vacuum lines without colored lines I ran them one at a time where they are numbered. Yes it is arduous patience is needed. 

    Yes, a piece of angle, aluminum, 1/2"x1/2"x3'. It is a cradle for the vacuum hose so that you can get a nice straight line on the hose in one pass.

  6. 1 hour ago, Daniel Glass said:

    What is a L bracket. Don’t u mean a piece of ange

    Yes, a piece of angle, aluminum, 1/2"x1/2"x3'. It is a cradle for the vacuum hose so that you can get a nice straight line on the hose in one pass.

  7. My '63 Riv 401 JT has the AFB and it idles very smoothly at a nice, slow idle, especially with the A/C on.

     

    You may have a vacuum leak somewhere.

     

    Throttle shaft may be worn, giving erratic vacuum leak there (especially since you indicate idle mixture screw on one side affects idle more than other side).

     

    What do you know about the seal and gaskets at the base of the carb? Could have a vacuum leak there. Do you have the stainless steel plate in there? I use a gasket on both sides of the plate (even though Buick only called for one).

     

    Have you cleaned the PCV valve? Check the PCV hose for a good seal.

     

    There is a thermostatically controlled air bleed on the top of the carb that opens when it is hot.  Make sure yours is sealing (press down gently with a pencil eraser).

     

    You may just need to get another carb.

     

  8. On 6/1/2023 at 5:11 PM, MrAG Riv said:

    Color coded using these guys … 16 Pack Paint Pens https://a.co/d/if7GyZ5 

     

    Lady at NAPA thought I was nuts when I asked for 40 feet of hose. I’d be lost without color coding.  

    This is also what I did. I made a tubing holder with a 3 foot long piece of thin aluminum L-bracket, 1/2"x1/2", to lay the tubing down in and hold it with some spring binder clips, then ran the paint pen down along the tubing in a straight line using the edge of the bracket as a finger guide.

     

     

    • Like 2
  9. I have a grease injector needle. It looks like something a doctor would use, but it has a grease fitting type ball on the end that snaps into the grease gun. I pierced the bearing seal with the needle and gently injected fresh grease into the bearing in a few places.

     

    https://www.amazon.com/LockNLube-Grease-Injector-Needle/dp/B0779J6HTX

     

    You have to take the drive shaft out of the car to do this, it is not something you do when you routinely grease the chassis.

     

     

  10. 13 minutes ago, Loren@65GS.com said:

    Our '63 has a factory vacuum trunk release. Can this be modified for the release? 

    I'm interested in a set if so.

     

     Loren@65GS.com

    No. The diameter of the vacuum actuator is too large. That's why Buick made the other set.

     

    Sorry.

  11. It is quite unusual to have the engine overheat so badly just idling and sitting in the driveway, not out on the road driving.

     

    I suspect something (an animal nest?) has plugged up the engine cooling passages or the radiator or both.

     

    Try flushing the engine with a hose by pushing water in the upper engine hose (no thermostat) and let it run out the bottom hose (disconnected from radiator). Flush radiator from bottom inlet to upper end (opposite of normal engine running coolant flow direction).

     

    • Like 1
  12. 51 minutes ago, cquisuila said:

    in this way

    i tested the thermostat in saucepan filled with water and it opens when hot water

    and the first leak (before huge overflow by radiator cap ) is shown on the picture

    image.png.808dfb920966c68b4d7beb61184d9a0a.png

    Yes this is correct. 
     

    it is good that you tested the thermostat in water in a sauce pan. 
     

    Did you replace that o-ring at the place where you first saw the leak?

     

    is the engine getting so hot just sitting there in your driveway, not out driving on the road?

     

    in the work you did, did you put on new head gaskets?

     

     

  13. First, with a new thermostat, you must confirm that it is installed in the correct position. The small brass cylinder must face "down" toward the hot water coming out of the engine. In the drawing below, the brass cylinder looks like it has a coiled spring around it. Your thermostat may not. The brass cylinder must feel the hot water to open the thermostat.

     

    image.png.8a15fbf056643688288c027d0b2380b8.png

     

    Leaking at the hose coming out of the filler cap is just because the engine is overheating. Once you fix that, the water from the cap will also be fixed. The water level in the radiator sould be 3 cm below the filler opening. Coolant above this level will get pushed out of the cap and out through the small hose.

     

     

     

     

    • Thanks 1
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