Hi Joe, Luckily I and my brother have probably removed around 10 57-66 windshields in the past few years so I think I can guide you pretty accurately.... (Only broke 1!) First. It is REALLY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! easy to brake the windshield as it is after all 40 year old glass and often very brittle. So.... Use EXTREME care taking it out and wear gloves and a long sleeve shirt so if it does break, it will not take your hand with it. That said, it is a relatively easy process aside from the brittle glass if you use EXTREME care and GO SLOW SLOW SLOW! Basically you take all the interior and exterior chrome off around the windshield including the wipers. Most is held on with screws, a few pieces are held on with clips noteably the long curved piece below the windshield. It kind of slides out of the clips around the side of the windshield. The Windshield wiper arms have a clip on the bottom which you have to pry off after holding the clip that holds it on back. Start by taking off the chrome by the front doors on the outside A Pillar. i think 5 phillips screws hold it on. One is hidden under the rubber and accessible after you open the door wide. Now the gasket is an engineering marvel! Plan to treat it gingerly and save it as they are getting rare/expensive and they do eventually dry out and leak. On new cars the only way they keep the windshield in is with a bucket of gooey black tar! NOT ON AN IMPERIAL! The Gasket is an interlocking gasket that holds the windshield in place by pressure from the center of the gasket toward the glass. TRULY FANTASTIC!!! I will do my best to describe it although it is tough without pictures. Anyway once you get the chrome off on the outside, the gasket has a line going down near the center of the rubber. Using a small dull screw driver or stout butter knife, pry up on the lip in the center of the gasket. Then follow it around the windshield. Glass Inner edge of Gasket _________ lip/Line in center of gasket pry up GENTLY outer edge of gasket Outside of car Once you get the lip started up, go around the entire windshield and get the lip pulled out. In effect this lip holds the inner edge of the gasket tight against the glass like a lock. Once the pressure from the center is relieved/unlocked if you will, the gasket is almost loose against the glass. Sometimes they use a bit of glue/tar against the glass although I have only seen this on one of the cars I did. I would guess the factory did not use tar only if it leaked or if it was replaced by the dealer. The rest were dry rubber against the glass inside and outside. Next take a rounded end butter knife and go around the glass sliding the butter knife down the glass around the windshield. This will seperate the glass from the gasket. Go all the way around the glass on the outside seperating rubber from glass. Now move inside and after removing all the chrome around the windshield do the butter knife again all the way around. On the curved sides of the glass the butter knife may be too long so a shorter small screw driver may be a good thing here. WARNING At no time should you apply any pressure against the glass with the butter knife until you have the gasket pulled away from the glass both inide and out. At this point you have all chrome removed, and you have gone around the glass both inside and outside and loosened the grip of the gasket from the glass where it has been attached for 40 years.. NOW COMES THE DANGEROUS PART! There are 2 techniques. One brings the glass out of the gasket, the 2nd brings the gasket with the windshield. Either is fine just see how it comes once you start pressing outward. a third and or fourth helper is good to have here. In the best situation, I would have 2-3 folks sit on the front seat of the car and press out inseveral spots GENTLY GENTLY GENTLY GENTLY GENTLY GENTLY GENTLY. Press out from the inside NEVER APPLYING TOO MUCH PRESSURE IN ANY ONE OR TWO SPOTS as that will crack it! A Flat Palm WITH GLOVES PRESSING AGAINST A RAG TO CUSHION THE GLASS and 3 pairs of hands is a good way to press from the inside so you apply even pressure at many points. With luck it will literally slide right out now. If it does not come easily, redo the butter knife trick to make sure the gasket is not stuck to the glass anywhere inside or out. Once it starts coming out most of the way, have one or 2 people stay inside and press out gently in at least 2-4 spots while the other helper(s) move out side to start pulling it out from the outside. It should now be loose and heavy! I would leave or put the gasket back on the glass once it is out (Depending on how it came out of the car) as it protects the edges of the glass which chip easily and are SHARP. Then wrap the whole thing in a blanket or 2. Foam and more blankets and or pillows would make me feel more comfortable on a long ride back with such a prize! Now that I have experienced it so many times, it is relatively easy for my brother and I to remove or install a windshield in 45 minutes tops. The tricky part is the pushing gently from the inside with enough force to get it out but not so much force that it cracks. I am CC'ing this to the IML for the archives as I don't recall it being explained in detail before. In closing that gasket is a fantastic thing how it is so easy to get off but how it holds the glass so tight and water proof. very cool! Let me know if you have further questions and I will try and explain better. If this car is going to be crushed or derbied, I would pick it as clean as possible and get the window switches/motors/handles etc. A cordless screw driver/drill with a few phillips bits is a beautiful thing to have! Remember... The Imp you save with these extra parts, could you your own! ;-) Happy parts hunting! Jeff Ingraham (Happily using about 5 of the windshields we have removed to repair broken glass in my other imps.) --- JOEHOLSOM@xxxxxxx wrote: > Jeff, I found a donar car for the windshield for my > 65 and the owner and I > neither one have any idea how to get it out without > breaking it. Any helpful > hints? I will be going to Illinois from my home in > Ohio to pick it up along > with a few other parts (spare headlight > buckets/lenses, a few chrome pieces, > and whatever I can find that might come in handy). I > will be heading that way > in a couple of weeks so any help would be > appreciated. > Joe > > PS I have a large piece of foam rubber and a bunch > of uhaul blankets for > transport. that should be enough shouldn't it? __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Games - play chess, backgammon, pool and more http://games.yahoo.com/