Dick; I too like the early Chebbies but I am partial to Plymouths myself, Fords are just plain crude. Plymouth took a liking, early on, to mounting their running gear on rubber mounts which made their cars very quiet compared to other low priced cars. Their gear boxes were also more solidly built then some other makes and they did have some excellent styling in those days. On the other hand the overhead valves of the Chebby six did make it a little more efficient. Best Regards Arran Foster 1954 Imperial Newport Needing A Left Side Tailight Bezel and other trim parts. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Dick Benjamin" <dickb@xxxxxxxxx> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Monday, December 29, 2003 6:07 PM Subject: Re: IML: A rare opportunity What a beautiful example! I hope no one "restores" this car - it is a gem for the ages! It really is incredible to realize the vast differences in quality of workmanship between the various brands of even the lowest priced "big 3" cars. The Chevrolet of these years was heads and shoulders above the competition in build quality in my opinion. And, by the way, I am old enough to remember these cars when they were new. My dad was a minor wheel for a major corporation (B.F.Goodrich) in those days, and he was given a new 38 F*rd as a company car. In a few months, it had broken down so many times that he gave up on it and traded it on a new 39 Chevy. I still remember the difference, which included appearance defects (none instead of many), quiet (very silent except in second gear, which whine I still remember fondly), and ride, which made me a lifetime fan of GM products! The sound of the door closing would convince even the most dedicated F*rd fan - the salesmen of the GM dealers all kept a F*rd on the lot to show the comparison!