> road at night. A passing police officer gave me > some flares > to light behind my car to warn away oncoming Like you need flares so people can see your Imperial better. LOL. I bet the police officer must have given you some look. They always do whenever I'm in trouble in my big behemoth. Anyway, it sounds like the problem could either be a loss of power at the fuse box, or a loss of all power given by the ignition switch. You remarked the windows, lights, etc still worked- those aren't regulated by the ignition switch. Next time it happens, jump a wire across the switch and try to crank the car. If it will crank, you've got a bad switch. It could be grounding out the solonoid or something, too- you may need to disconnect the wires from the switch. (thankfully, '67's have no locking steering column, so the wires are easy to get at) The bulkhead connector could be the problem too- despite its recent cleaning, sometimes the wire crimps work themselves loose, or just get crud on them. Try an ohm meter across the block, on all the terminals. If you use a pointy-ended probe, you can pierce the insulation so you don't have to disconnect anything. That's all I can think of for now...if it were a '74 (like my Plymouth) I'd say check the safety belt interlock circuitry...it can sometimes play tricks. ===== --Mike Pittinaro "Peculiar travel suggestions are dancing lessons from God." --Kurt Vonnegut, "Cat's Cradle" __________________________________________________ Yahoo! - We Remember 9-11: A tribute to the more than 3,000 lives lost http://dir.remember.yahoo.com/tribute