Rollin says he cannot e-mail the list directly so he sent this to me and I am forwarding it. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Rollin Bard" <Rollin.Bard@xxxxxxxx> > > Hi Hugh and Therese: > Yes, my dad became a Chrysler Plymouth dealer in 1952 after running a Dodge > Plymouth store from 1947. He retired in 1984. I grew up in the dealership > and have lots of memories. One year, we sold 8 Imperials, more than any > other dealer in West Virginia. That may have been in 1958. I would wash > and wax the new Imperials and put them in the showroom. We never had more > than two at a time being in a small 8000 population town. We had one > customer who owned a General Tire shop and would buy a new one every two or > three years. > And yes, Chrysler Corp caused us a lot of grief over those 30 some years. > Poor quality, not giving us hot cars (rare), making us give up the > Studebaker franchise in order to get the Valiant franchise (1959), water > leaks in 1957, too many dealers close to our poverty stricken area, near > bankruptcy of Chrysler, terrible performance after the gov't started telling > manufacturers how to build the cars for smog control. I went to work for > Chrysler in Detroit in 1964 and stayed until 1970. Actually worked at the > Jefferson Ass'y plant in 1965 when my 66 LeBaron was built. On lunch > breaks, I would walk around outside in the "sickbay". You never saw such > bad body quality that had to be repaired before shipment. But as a dealer, > I saw poor quality come through. Question: is it cheaper to have the UAW > factory workers fix the defects or have the dealer fix it under warranty? > After all is said, I always thought the 65 and 66 Chrysler products were the > best they ever built. And that is why I am proud of my 66 Imperial. No > smog control and easy to repair. I haven't started yet, but I know I am > going to have fun. > I sent this to you directly because I can't seem to get anything published > on the Mailing List. > > Rollin Bard > Fort Worth area