I had a pleasant experience dealing with a vendor I think was recommended by a person on this list. The help received helped us put good brakes under a customers old Dodge. I appreciated the way the vendor approached selling us used parts. I want list listeners to know that Moore's said that they would do something and that they did do it and right the first time. We needed two drums for the front of a '67 Dodge. We had looked elsewhere and way beyond. The two Kelsey Hayes drum/hub assemblies (with good, swaged in place left and right hand studs even) arrived machined and separately packaged. This is their way of checking to make sure the drums will finish below .060" over nominal which is what we specified. Had we not found these drums I would have continued my search for a disc brake conversion set of parts. When all the good drums are gone, converting to disc brakes is what should be done IMHO. This type conversion I have done only once and not on a '67 Dodge and this is not a car that I own so with good drums we fixed the car. The vendor for the used parts was Moore's Auto Salvage in Rapid City, SD. They did not have parts for MY vehicle :<( but I will try them again some day for the rear drums for the Polara. Following the recent discussions Re: brakes I will describe some of what we did to make the Dodge stop dead straight hands off, smooth and quiet. The drums as received were course machined and undersized. There was plenty of material for remachining on my lathe as this was required in preparation for grinding as there were 'hot spots' in the drums. This condition occurs due to heat. Carbide tools will not cut and level these ridges and a noisey, grabby brake job will be the result. The drum braking surface must be true and smooth. BTW the hard spots do not go away; just smoothed. Brake backing plates have been restored where the shoes rest. ALL hardware was replaced (well, except the adjusters which were cleaned and lubed with synthetic brake lube). The cylinders are new and the hoses are not original and definately not cracked. Fluid is clean and master cylinder would have been changed but we have records that show it NEW not too long a go. This car is highway driven regularly so the rear cylinders are not sticking as will happen with hydraulic parts that sit for six months at a time. This is not a car that needs the extra detail of DOT 5 fluid. The shoes were off the shelf Bendix relines and fit the drums just fine; nothing real special but from our experiences good dependable state of the art performance suited for use on this car. There have been advances in lining materials that make me leary of using OE lining (did on a 1942 IH military truck once; took two large gorillas to slow the thing). Anyway, IMHO, good hydraulics, drums and brake linings assembled with new hardware will make an old Chrysler stop just fine. HTH Warren Anderson Sedona,AZ