My '67 is starting to show a disturbing trend. I'm afraid to drive it much until the problem is resolved, so I hope you good folks can help me. Sorry if this message is a bit long, but I wanted to include all of the clues. Once in a while, the car simply dies. The engine turns off, taking the power brakes and power steering with it. The brake lights, tail lights, and emergency flasher(!) all stop working. Suddenly, I'm a big, rolling menace to society. And after I get the car stopped and put it in Park, turning the ignition key produces nothing but silence. Yesterday this happened to me while I was driving at 30 mph. Fortunately it was daytime and I was on a straightaway, but it could just as easily have happened at 65 mph on a curvy road at night. A passing police officer gave me some flares to light behind my car to warn away oncoming traffic. I can fix the problem by wiggling a thick bundle of wires under the hood near the firewall on the driver's side -- though sometimes it takes me 15 minutes of twiddling before I get lucky, and sometimes it dies again right after that. Some of those wires enter a black rectangular connection block mounted on the firewall. My mechanic disconnected the block and cleaned all of the connections, but that didn't solve it. I think that block is what appears as "Bulkhead Disconnect" on the engine compartment wiring diagram: http://www.imperialclub.com/YearbyYear/1967/WiringDiagrams/ So far, I've been unable to *induce* an episode of Sudden Imperial Death Syndrome by wiggling wires, so it's been hard to experiment. What failure could produce such widespread symptoms, and yet be fixed (temporarily) by my pushing on wires? Of course, that bundle of wires could be pushing on something else nearby, but it doesn't seem like it. Next time it happens, what should I do to trace the problem? I'm a duffer, so don't be shy about suggesting something obvious! Some more clues: -- The headlights, courtesy lights in the doors, and power windows are NOT affected. But everything else electrical is lost. Am I right in thinking that none of the above functions are wired through the fuse box? A friend of mine used a test light (I gotta get me one of those) and found that there is no power at the fuse box when the car is suffering one of these episodes. -- During an episode, if I use a screwdriver to short across the terminals of the starter relay, the starter does crank, and the radiator fan turns a little, but the engine doesn't turn over. My friend with the test light tells me that the starter relay has good ground during an episode, but no power on the positive side. -- For what it's worth, I replaced the car's original voltage regulator with a NOS one about a year ago. But it's on the opposite side of the car from that wiring block anyway. -- The problem has happened four times now: Once while the car was moving forward, once while reversing, once while idling, and once when the car had been sitting overnight in my garage. The first time it happened, there had been no work done on the car in months, but I had driven it on a long, hot road trip just before that. Thank you very much for any help! Tim Klein '67 Crown 4DHT Rye, New York