Just my two cents, I recentley had to replace the 413 in the 60. I found another engine from Lowell who is on the list and Im sure there is someone like that not to far from where you are. Anyway rebuilt my heads,new belts, everything else was left alone including the plug wires,points, cap. Pulled it out as a unit, engine and tranny, looked her over real good, put it backed in all together and there you go! Before I get attact here I will be putting new wires ect.... On in the future. Keep in mind this was done outside on the side of the house with one helper who only cost was soda pop and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. My total investment so far is around $1200.00. I don’t know how mechanicaly inclined you are but if some of the guys at those shops can do it. So can I or most of us on the list can. Best wishes I wish I was close by to help. I love peanut butter and jelly. Tim 1960 Imperial -----Original Message----- From: mailing-list-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:mailing-list-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of imperial59@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Wednesday, May 12, 2004 7:27 AM To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: IML: '59 back to square one > Just got the pleasant news today from the mechanic I brought > my Imperial to for the engine rebuild, that his cost alone on the > rebuild was going to be around $4,000.00, and that I would end up > paying around $6,000.00. I told him for six thousand I could go Hi Bill: I agree that $6K is ridiculous for a rebuild. Pistons are the only piece that would be hard to find and those are readily available if you are willing to pay $50 each. I spent around 2K on my engine with me doing the removal and reinstall. I think you will find someone to do it for your original estimate of $3500. I hate to say the same thing over again but I really think you need more diagnosis before committing to a whole engine rebuild. From your description I believe that you have carb issues that could be cured for a couple hundred instead of a couple thousand. I sure wish we lived closer together so that I could look at it with you. I know how hard it can be to find a good mechanic willing to work on these beasts. In their defense you could probably fit three normal cars in the space that the Imperial takes up and make twice as much money in the same amount of time replacing throw away parts on new cars... You have to find someone who shares your passion for the old cars. I haven't been lucky enough to find anyone like that myself but I have the added advantage of having a garage and have been working on them for 20 years now. Good luck to you. Steve