Watch out on Doc's seats. He does in fact have an enormous pile of seat skins. I have not seen his story listed here lateley, so my apologies if this repeats: He has a ranch-house on a former (citrus?) plantation in Silicon valley. He has a lot big enough for 4-8 houses that has a barn down at the back end. It looks like the subdivision grew up around his property in the last 40 years, just as Silicon Valley has boomed everywhere on this fertile peninsula. Dr. Mike liked Imperials plenty fine. Apparently, his wife was not fond of fins and he wound up with mostly 62-68 cars. (-not that I listen to my wife all that much on auto styling, so maybe it was just him) Some time ago he found himself with a whole yard full of cars. I think that I remember him saying something about every year in every configuration, but it was really some time ago and I dont recall whatever scheme he had in his younger days about Imperial procurement. One day he decided that the house needed a new addition. The city used this as a lever to make him get rid of all of his cars in return for a building permit. I guess that the neighbors complained too much or the truant officer was concerned that a kid would lock themself in a trunk or something. Anyway, as anybody that tends to own large cars and do mechanical work on them tends to be, Dr. Mike didn't think much of the government or neighbors fiddling with his cars. He decided that he didn't need the bodies as badly as he needed the addition, so he hired a number of seasonal from-south-of-the-border artisans to do a little work for him in the back yard. These guys dismantled every last one of these cars and the parts all went into the barn in the rear. I heard him swear several times that he had never been able to find anything after his assistants had finished, but I found what I needed in minutes. Back to the point: Yes, there are 100 seat skins in the upper reaches of the barn. When I was there 6 years ago, the entire pile was pretty much rotted, matching pairs nowhere to be found (why only onseies? are they like black socks in the wash?), and falling apart or drier than a sun-baked chamois. I'm not one to say that you won't find a gem there, but its the hard parts in the boxes that you go to him for. Need an alternator or radio for $25? He's got 30 of them in a box. Pre-tested by thier original owners, no less! The only thing that might be good there in the seats is their patterns, but whatever you have is probably better, even if shredded. It is a barn and everything has a layer of dust and hay embedded in it. He's a really nice guy, loves to chat, and I hung with him up to the point where he went off on a tangent about all sorts of foreigners moving into the state and how it just wasn't right and all that jazz. That's just not my kind of politics, so I left and havn't been back. Mostly because I just don't need parts from him in genral with my gorgeously-finned 196o, but I found Lowell's company a little easier on the ear, even if he does charge a pretty penny. Dr. Mike does not ship. He does not do telephone business that I am aware of. You have to stop by, as far as I know. If you live in Northern California, a pilgrimmage is definitely worthwhile. The man saw it coming before most people on this list did and got in early. Polite and fair, never hurried. Worthy of respect in this Imperial world of ours, just not world famous for useable seat fabric inventory. Your upholsterer awaits you. Redoing with new skins is almost inevitable 30-40 years later if the sun or cats got to yours (IMHO). Hope that helps, I thought him an intriguing fellow. ===== Kenyon Wills 6o LeBaron - America's Most Carefully Built Car 73 LeBaron - Long Low & Luxurious __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Sports - Coverage of the 2002 Olympic Games http://sports.yahoo.com