Hi Andy, If it is possible to tow the car from where you are to Michigan, I would consider that option. I bought my car from British Columbia and towed it to Thunder Bay Ontario (north of Minneapolis) and have not been unhappy about that. You have a car that you have started and you know what shape it is in. You know that it needs cowl work. If you part it out, it takes up a lot more room (shipping considerations) and then you have to start looking for another body. My car was pulled from Kelowna BC to my home using a tow bar. The front bumper removed, the drive shaft was disconnected and the windshield covered up with cardboard. It pulled nicely and was well behaved on the trip. If you can get the car to the nearest highway, I would pull off the front bumper, pull the driveshaft, hook up some running lights and such and enjoy the view in your rearview mirror as you pull the 500 to your new home. Fixing the cowl is not that hard and can be done rather quickly if you plan the project and are careful in your execution. I can provide some information on how I fixed my cowl and there are a number of list members who have done similar repairs. The web site has a very nice article on fixing a bad cowl. Good luck and I hope that I did not stirr up the pot too much. Kevin Andy Grow wrote: > > OK guys, it's getting to be crunch time for me. > > As I think most of you know, I can't finish the Polara 500 in time > before we leave Alaska, and that means I can't take it with me. :( > > The guy that was considering buying it - well, he's afraid of being in > the same dilemma I was...that being the complete and total lack of > parts for the car here in Alaska (body parts specifically), and the > amazing cost of getting things shipped up here (2-3x the cost of the > part, usually). I don't think he's gonna buy the car. > > SO - that all being said...if you had a '64 Polara 500 that was > completely rusted through on the cowl and parts of the firewall, but > the rest of the body (all doors and panels and all trim) were in good > to really good condition, would you try and hang on to the car for > restoration, or just part it all out and start over from scratch once > you get to the lower-48??? > > I am seriously wondering if towing this thing all the way to Michigan, > and trying to get it running there, is worth the extra $$$ and time. > > Does it make more sense for me to part it out, keep what I can, and try > to find a good body car in the lower-48? I've got the TTI headers, > aluminum dual-quad intake, and a bunch of other hi-po parts already. > The 318 Poly is about 50% rebuilt. The trim is in excellent condition. > Front bumper is good. Hood is good. Front fenders are good. > > If I'm to part it out, is there anything specific I should NOT take > with me? I think I'm somewhat limited by what the Coast Guard > will/will not let me take. > > And - most important - what are the chances of finding a decent (decent > = NOT rusted out) '64 B-body car in the lower 48 for NOT a ton of > change??? The Coast Guard pays well, but I'll never be rich! :) > > Thanks for the help guys. I'm looking forward to your replies. > Andy > 64 Polara 500 (still!) > > > > __________________________________ > Do you Yahoo!? > Yahoo! Mail - Helps protect you from nasty viruses. > http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail Kevin R. Merkley Thunder Bay, Ontario 64 Dodge 440 2dr HT (Cdn) ---- Please address private mail -- mail of interest to only one person -- directly to that person. I.e., send parts/car transactions and negotiations as well as other personal messages only to the intended recipient, not to the Clubhouse public address. This practice will protect your privacy, reduce the total volume of mail and fine tune the content signal to Mopar topic. Thanks! '62 to '65 Mopar Clubhouse Discussion Guidelines: http://www.1962to1965mopar.ornocar.org/mletiq.html. b7yoMz.