Kerry et al: 71 was the first year for vent-windowless 4DHT Imperials. The vent windows were, however, available as an option, manual or power. The same went for 72 and 73, I think. Fuselage Imps look much better without the vents, I think. Better balanced with all that open space between the A- and C-pillars. I've considered modifying my 70 to eliminate the vents for just that reason. Pete in PA Date: Fri, 8 Feb 2002 15:05:11 -0800 (PST) From: KerryPinkerton <pinkertonk@xxxxxxxxx> Subject: IML: Imperial Friends and Fun Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Well Today was THE Day. Jim Stacey drove all the way down from Toronto to North Alabama to bring me the folding top mechanism from a 69 Chrysler that a guy in Toronto donated to the 57 Imperial Roadster cause. In return, Jim plundered the 72 parts car for his 73 in pieces. About 7:30 Jim pulled up pulling a small UHAUL (4x4x8) behind his Escort. About 8 hours later he left with both front fenders, rear quarters, front wheel wells, rear bumper, the gas tank, and a much of little stuff. His UHAUL is full to the brim. There is not much left of the 72. I will probably pull the dash, doors and front clip and haul the rest to the scrap metal man. If anyone needs any trim, glass, etc, let me know. I'm going to sell my 73 so I don't plan on needing any spares. It was a fun day but I'm Whupped as we say in the South. Jim is headed north and will spend the night in Bowling Green Kentucky. Jim's a great guy and I'm looking forward to seeing his 73 back on the road. Btw, his 73 has NO vent windows. I knew there were power and crank vents (I have power) but had not heard or seen of no vent windows before. Does anyone else have that configuration? Kerryp