If you take it out and file the contact points, clean and oil the rest of the movement, it will probably work again for another couple of years. I service the clocks in all of my cars regularly, and find very little trouble keeping them going. The most serious thing seems to be a broken stop for the contact points which can cause the movable point to swing past the movement and ground against the case. This causes a short circuit, will blow fuse, and make sparks. Even so, this is also repairable, but requires more skill. The only Imperial car clocks that I have ever found to truly be worn out were those that came in the '56 models. They were not spring wound, but rather a continuos running electric motor. These clocks kept running, and did wear themselves out. The symptom of this is that they run very quickly occassionally (like when you hit a bunp in the road), and then stop. This is due to broken pivots and worn holes in the plates. Paul In an email dated Mon, 17 May 2004 2:55:48 pm GMT, Dodd GS07 David J <DoddDJ@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: >The clock on my 66 has gone dead. When I first got the car in 99 it was >dead but I put some liquid graphite inside and it started working. Anyone >have an extra one or know where I can get one. Ebay has nothing. > >thanks > >dave > > >