Hugh: I am confident that the repair will get you to the cruise. I bet that the whole unit was pulling too much current and heating your starter button wires too much. A rebuilt one should do the trick. I can't believe that the shop didn't have a 392 Hemi starter for your Imperial in stock! The very idea! It should have been shelved alphabetically after Hudson but before Packard :) If I was a little closer I would gladly go over and help you put it on just as I am sure anyone else on the list would that has a little mechanical experience. Can't wait to hear how it turns out and about all the fun you have on the cruise. Dave Knight >From: "Hugh & Therese" <hugtrees@xxxxxxxx> >Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >To: "Imperial Mailing List" <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >Subject: IML: Never give up! >Date: Thu, 2 May 2002 16:25:24 -0500 > >Yesterday, poor old Mrs. Blueberry, my estimable 1958 4 door Southampton, >failed to start. The solenoid finally quit. maybe it was all the abuse >from slow starts when warm, a problem rectified, somehow, by changing the >timing. Who knows? The starter was weak, and the solenoid gave out. I >had >to get the car taken by wrecker to the museum. I had been using the car as >a daily driver while the repairs to my 1992 Chrysler, recently totaled out >by the insurance company, crawl along. It was supposed to be returned last >Friday. It wasn't and tomorrow is no longer a reasonable prospect either. >Well, not to the repair company, anyway. > >So, I went out to the museum, getting a lift from a friend, and, with a >little over an hour's work, managed to remove the starter. The confined >space is a huge factor here, plus the design of the unit which prevents >using a ratchet wrench on the main nuts. I got it to the rebuild shop by >11:00 AM. I was told if they made it a rush job I just might get it back >tomorrow afternoon. They recognized it as a Chrysler Corp starter but did >not have a 392 Hemi starter on their shelves to swap out, strangely enough. > >So, I thought I had run out of options. I informed my work I would not be >in tomorrow. I also ruefully contemplated not being able to take part, yet >again, in my favourite automotive event of the year, which is on Saturday. >Two years ago, my drive shaft broke. Last year, I cracked a head. And >this >year the starter had quit on me. Sigh! > >But, enormous changes at the last minute! I got a call from the rebuilder >a >few minutes ago. The starter is done. Good as new. Unfortunately, I am >now in the wrong place to pick it up, having been brought home again. A >friend of mine is going to pick it up, however, and I have just paid the >very reasonable fee of $170 approximately, for the work. Once my wife >comes >home, I will borrow her car and go out to the museum again and try to >reinstall it. On paper, It's easy. In practice, it will be a tough job. >I >think I am up for it. I just hope I have not damaged any of the other >electrics when I was trying, repeatedly, to get it going yesterday. there >was a faint smell of burning and the wires at the back of the substitute >start button installed long ago under the key were too hot to touch. > >If I can get it started, I am back in business. I can go to work tomorrow >and to the cruise on Saturday. I can stop worrying about the Chrysler, >too, >if the Imperial is more reliable. Isn't life grand and exciting? > >Hugh > >PS. Have you noticed that in theory, practice and theory are always the >same but in practice they never are? > > > >