Kenyon, Speaking from experience, I agree with Paul's comment on low-mileage cars. I'd start by replacing the voltage regulator because it's an easy repair and a likely culprit, although this is one of the few items I *have* replaced on my 124,000-mile '67 and yet have not replaced on my 17,000-mile '78. (The '67 has some original parts that have far outlived their counterparts on the little-used '78!) Chris is LA 67 Crown 78 NYB Salon On 3/14/04 8:01 pm, RandalPark@xxxxxxx (RandalPark@xxxxxxx) wrote: > Kenyon, > > I have found that low miles cars that spent a lot of time sitting around need > as much tinkering as high miles ones that were used a lot. Obviously, the > difference is that the car that you are working on is a lot more rewarding > than one with 400,000 miles on it that needs upholstery and paint. > > A car is only a new car once. Even a mint condition low miles '64 Imperial > Crown is past its useful life in the eyes of the state. Hang in there! You'll > figure it out! It's gonna be fine! > > Paul > > In a message dated 3/14/2004 10:47:43 PM Eastern Standard Time, > imperialist1960@xxxxxxxxx writes: > >> I replaced the AC compressor in the 1964. I painted it too well and when I >> put the ground battery cable into it via the bolt that holds it on, the car >> refused to charge, probably due to poor contact with the metal. It >> occasionally spiked up, but rarely. >> I relocated the battery cable to be secured by the bolt that holds the coil >> onto the intake manifold, and used a wire wheel on ALL surfaces involved and >> am certain that I have a good metal-to-metal connection. >> The alternator gauge immediately showed results, reaching for "C"harge and >> away from "D"ishcharge immediately once I was off idle. Woked great the day >> that I drove the car after performing this correction. >> I go to drive the car today and it is displaying identical symptoms as >> before. When the lights are on it is at the mark half way between the center >> and "D", meaning that the battery is draining. Driving the car at freeway >> speed results in the needle creeping to the center but never over, and >> varying depending on the electrical load and RPM put on it. It moves up as >> the engine spins faster, but again, never into the charge area. >> I am beginning to suspect the voltage regulator and plan to do that next. >> Any reason to do otherwise? The car has 27,800 miles (!!!!) and sat forever >> but is very clean. >>