I am faced with either paying someone to rebuild my power steering pump for
$160, buying a used replacment for $75 or attempting to rebuild it myself.
The guy who wants $160 indicated that it was fairly involved, but that might
just be 'selling' trouble. I am on a tight budget and would be willing to
try it myself, except I don't have a pulley-puller or an arbor press to put
it back on. Can someone convince me I should still attempt it? PLEASE?!
> From: mailing-list-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (List Server)
> Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2004 23:27:28 -0700
> Subject: IML DIGEST
>
> This is the digest version of the Imperial Mailing List. To receive messages
> individually, send an email to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx with the following
> in the body of your message:
>
> set mode standard mailing-list
>
> To unsubscribe entirely, visit:
> http://imperialclub.com/IML-Specific/unsubscribe.htm
>
> If you have been switched to digest mode without your consent and you want to
> know why, visit:
> http://imperialclub.com/IML-Specific/autodigest.htm
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> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~IML DIGEST~~~~~~~~~~~~~~MESSAGE SEPARATOR~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> |
> |
> |
>
> From: "Larry Noska" <lnoska@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Subject: IML: Dads 82 Water Pump
> Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2004 19:05:56 -0700
> Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Does any body have thoughts about a new water pump over a rebuilt water
> Pump? New is $34.00 rebuilt is $17.00 at Napa.
>
> The FSM said to use correct pump since pump impeller must be compatible with
> the drive ratio provided by pulley system. The Napa parts person said only
> one pump was in the book. I did reference a 1982 Imperial.
>
> Lawrence R Noska
> lnoska@xxxxxxxxxxxx
> Hauser, ID 83854
>
>
>
> |
> |
> |
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~IML DIGEST~~~~~~~~~~~~~~MESSAGE SEPARATOR~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> |
> |
> |
>
> Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2004 21:07:33 -0500
> From: Brad Hogg <roadhogg@xxxxxxx>
> Subject: Re: IML: NYBeater
> Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Speaking of my fleet, I (with the help of Darryl Kippen and my neighbour)
> managed to get my 78 Newport and 76 NYB out of their winter sleeping
> quarters tonight. What started as, "I wonder if the ice has gone down
> enough to at least get the Newporker to rock back and forth!" ended in, "Now
> that we have the Newporker out all we have to to do get the NYB out is...".
>
> The cars are nicely parked end to end in my driveway along with the blue 78
> at the far end. The white 77 got shunted onto the street while the 90
> Imperial is snug in the garage. Now that I have all this extra space....
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "James" <nyb@xxxxxxx>
> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Sent: Monday, April 12, 2004 4:56 PM
> Subject: Re: IML: NYBeater
>
>
> Aw, come on Brad, you can't have a monopoly on the term NYBeater. But
> seriously, thanks for the compliment.
>
> |
> |
> |
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~IML DIGEST~~~~~~~~~~~~~~MESSAGE SEPARATOR~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> |
> |
> |
>
> From: "Steve B." <imperial59@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Subject: RE: IML: Dads 82 Water Pump
> Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2004 22:22:23 -0400
> Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
>
> Does any body have thoughts about a new water pump over a rebuilt water
> Pump? New is $34.00 rebuilt is $17.00 at Napa.
>
>
> For that price go with the new pump. Rebuilts are pretty dang good but
> the antifreeze you loose would cost you the difference in the pump
> price.
>
> Steve B.
>
>
> |
> |
> |
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~IML DIGEST~~~~~~~~~~~~~~MESSAGE SEPARATOR~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> |
> |
> |
>
> From: "Clint and Laurie Carter" <laurielu@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Subject: Re: IML: Dads 82 Water Pump
> Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2004 19:31:57 -0700
> Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> After selling auto parts for 18 years, Larry,I can tell you, go with the new
> pump. Fuel and water. The difference is not that great.
> Clint & Laurie Carter
> 59 Crown
> aka Laurie's Pink Lady
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Larry Noska" <lnoska@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
> To: "Imperial Club" <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Sent: Monday, April 12, 2004 7:05 PM
> Subject: IML: Dads 82 Water Pump
>
>
>> Does any body have thoughts about a new water pump over a rebuilt water
>> Pump? New is $34.00 rebuilt is $17.00 at Napa.
>>
>> The FSM said to use correct pump since pump impeller must be compatible
> with
>> the drive ratio provided by pulley system. The Napa parts person said
> only
>> one pump was in the book. I did reference a 1982 Imperial.
>>
>> Lawrence R Noska
>> lnoska@xxxxxxxxxxxx
>> Hauser, ID 83854
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
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> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> |
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>
> From: "Steve B." <imperial59@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Subject: RE: IML: Actual Current Prices Of 1959 - 1960 Imperial 4 Door
> Hardtops
> Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2004 22:34:32 -0400
> Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
>
> ------=_NextPart_000_000D_01C420DE.564AAEA0
> Content-Type: text/plain;
> charset="us-ascii"
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>
> I'm very interested in buying a 1959 - 1960 Imperial 4 Door Hardtop.
>
>
>
> The prices on the '59 page are getting a bit stale. I will go get a new
> copy of the pricing guide and updating the prices for you or you can get
> one yourself at most any big book store. Old Car Price Guide is the one
> to look for.
>
>
>
> I see actual selling prices all over the place. Watch e-bay and the
> other on-line places for a while to get a feel for the prices. My
> advice would be to buy the best possible car you can find. '59 and '60
> pieces are extremely rare. NOS is impossible to find or priced out of
> the ballpark and repro stuff just doesn't exist. Lots of pot metal was
> used and it is costly to refinish. To give you an idea of prices two
> '59 mirrors recently sold on e-bay. Both were NOS and looked to be in
> perfect shape. The driver side went over $500 and the passenger side
> wasn't far behind..
>
>
>
> The up side to this is that people notice the car. My '59 is pretty
> much a basket case. Yet I can still take my car to the local show and
> people will run past $40k Chevys to come see the old girl with the
> tattered interior and tired paint. This always makes up for the
> scarcity of parts.
>
>
>
> Steve B.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> ------=_NextPart_000_000D_01C420DE.564AAEA0
> Content-Type: text/html;
> charset="us-ascii"
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
>
> <html>
>
> <head>
> <META HTTP-EQUIV=3D"Content-Type" CONTENT=3D"text/html; =
> charset=3Dus-ascii">
>
>
> <meta name=3DGenerator content=3D"Microsoft Word 10 (filtered)">
>
> <style>
> <!--
> /* Style Definitions */
> p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal
> {margin:0in;
> margin-bottom:.0001pt;
> font-size:12.0pt;
> font-family:"Times New Roman";}
> a:link, span.MsoHyperlink
> {color:blue;
> text-decoration:underline;}
> a:visited, span.MsoHyperlinkFollowed
> {color:purple;
> text-decoration:underline;}
> span.EmailStyle17
> {font-family:Arial;
> color:navy;}
> @page Section1
> {size:8.5in 11.0in;
> margin:1.0in 1.25in 1.0in 1.25in;}
> div.Section1
> {page:Section1;}
> -->
> </style>
>
> </head>
>
> <body lang=3DEN-US link=3Dblue vlink=3Dpurple>
>
> <div class=3DSection1>
>
> <div>
>
> <div>
>
> <div>
>
> <p class=3DMsoNormal style=3D'margin-left:.5in'><font size=3D3 =
> face=3D"Times New Roman"><span
> style=3D'font-size:12.0pt'>I'm very interested in buying a 1959 - 1960 =
> Imperial 4
> Door Hardtop.</span></font></p>
>
> <p class=3DMsoNormal><font size=3D2 color=3Dnavy face=3DArial><span =
> style=3D'font-size:
> 10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'> </span></font></p>
>
> <p class=3DMsoNormal><font size=3D2 color=3Dnavy face=3DArial><span =
> style=3D'font-size:
> 10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'>The prices on the ’59 page =
> are
> getting a bit stale. I will go get a new copy of the pricing guide =
> and
> updating the prices for you or you can get one yourself at most any big =
> book
> store. Old Car Price Guide is the one to look =
> for.</span></font></p>
>
> </div>
>
> <div>
>
> <p class=3DMsoNormal style=3D'margin-left:.5in'><font size=3D3 =
> color=3Dnavy
> face=3D"Times New Roman"><span =
> style=3D'font-size:12.0pt;color:navy'> </span></font></p>
>
> <p class=3DMsoNormal><font size=3D2 color=3Dnavy face=3DArial><span =
> style=3D'font-size:
> 10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'>I see actual selling prices all =
> over the
> place. Watch e-bay and the other on-line places for a while to get =
> a feel
> for the prices. My advice would be to buy the best possible car =
> you can
> find. ’59 and ’60 pieces are extremely rare. NOS =
> is
> impossible to find or priced out of the ballpark and repro stuff just =
> doesn’t
> exist. Lots of pot metal was used and it is costly to =
> refinish. To
> give you an idea of prices two ’59 mirrors recently sold on =
> e-bay.
> Both were NOS and looked to be in perfect shape. The driver side =
> went
> over $500 and the passenger side wasn’t far =
> behind….</span></font></p>
>
> <p class=3DMsoNormal><font size=3D2 color=3Dnavy face=3DArial><span =
> style=3D'font-size:
> 10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'> </span></font></p>
>
> <p class=3DMsoNormal><font size=3D2 color=3Dnavy face=3DArial><span =
> style=3D'font-size:
> 10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'>The up side to this is that people =
> notice
> the car. My ’59 is pretty much a basket case… =
> Yet I can
> still take my car to the local show and people will run past $40k Chevys =
> to
> come see the old girl with the tattered interior and tired paint. =
> This
> always makes up for the scarcity of parts.</span></font></p>
>
> <p class=3DMsoNormal><font size=3D2 color=3Dnavy face=3DArial><span =
> style=3D'font-size:
> 10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'> </span></font></p>
>
> <p class=3DMsoNormal><font size=3D2 color=3Dnavy face=3DArial><span =
> style=3D'font-size:
> 10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'> =
> &=
> nbsp; &n=
> bsp; &nb=
> sp;
> </span></font><font size=3D2 color=3Dnavy face=3DArial><span =
> style=3D'font-size:10.0pt;
> font-family:Arial;color:navy'>Steve B.</span></font></p>
>
> <p class=3DMsoNormal><font size=3D2 color=3Dnavy face=3DArial><span =
> style=3D'font-size:
> 10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'> </span></font></p>
>
> <p class=3DMsoNormal><font size=3D2 color=3Dnavy face=3DArial><span =
> style=3D'font-size:
> 10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'> </span></font></p>
>
> </div>
>
> </div>
>
> </div>
>
> </div>
>
> </body>
>
> </html>
>
> ------=_NextPart_000_000D_01C420DE.564AAEA0--
>
>
> |
> |
> |
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~IML DIGEST~~~~~~~~~~~~~~MESSAGE SEPARATOR~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> |
> |
> |
>
> From: "Hugh & Therese" <hugtrees@xxxxxxxx>
> Subject: IML: 392 in pieces
> Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2004 21:38:56 -0500
> Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Hi folks,
>
> I got to se my 58's 392 Hemi in pieces today. Fascinating stuff. I'm
> pinched for time this second but can say I was right, it needed a ring job.
> The cylinder walls look fine but there is some scarring on one or two of the
> pistons and also on the bearings that attach to the crank shaft. They gave
> me a list of desirable actions to take from this point but . . .
>
> There is a huge crack in the block !!!! It's old, very old and does not
> seem to have reached the cylinders. They want to take the block to a shop
> and find out the best thing to do with it. It probably reaches the water
> jacket but I know for a fact it doesn't leak.
>
> I thought the car had been seriously worked on before. This kind of damage
> comes from freezing, not over heating so it is not related to the cracked
> head of a few years ago.
>
> I took some pictures of the engine and of the car, which looks very high up
> in the front end, for some reason! Getting heat from the "boss." Gotta go.
>
> Hugh
>
>
> |
> |
> |
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~IML DIGEST~~~~~~~~~~~~~~MESSAGE SEPARATOR~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> |
> |
> |
>
> Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2004 20:02:04 -0700 (PDT)
> From: Martin Karson <mkei@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Subject: RE: IML: Actual Current Prices Of 1959 - 1960 Imperial 4 Door
> Hardtops
> Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> --0-641031179-1081825324=:3590
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
>
> Steve B. thanks for the help. I will follow with the price guides as well
> as E Bay. Had no idea the parts were so out of sight. Many thanks for your
> insight into pricing and availability. Marty Karson
>
> "Steve B." <imperial59@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> I'm very interested in buying a 1959 - 1960 Imperial 4 Door Hardtop.
>
>
>
> The prices on the ’59 page are getting a bit stale. I will go get a new copy
> of the pricing guide and updating the prices for you or you can get one
> yourself at most any big book store. Old Car Price Guide is the one to look
> for.
>
>
>
>
> I see actual selling prices all over the place. Watch e-bay and the other
> on-line places for a while to get a feel for the prices. My advice would be
> to buy the best possible car you can find. ’59 and ’60 pieces are extremely
> rare. NOS is impossible to find or priced out of the ballpark and repro stuff
> just doesn’t exist. Lots of pot metal was used and it is costly to refinish.
> To give you an idea of prices two ’59 mirrors recently sold on e-bay. Both
> were NOS and looked to be in perfect shape. The driver side went over $500
> and the passenger side wasn’t far behind….
>
>
>
> The up side to this is that people notice the car. My ’59 is pretty much a
> basket case… Yet I can still take my car to the local show and people will
> run past $40k Chevys to come see the old girl with the tattered interior and
> tired paint. This always makes up for the scarcity of parts.
>
>
>
> Steve B.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> --0-641031179-1081825324=:3590
> Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii
>
> <DIV>Steve B. thanks for the help. I will follow with the
> price guides as well as E Bay. Had no idea the parts were so out of
> sight. Many thanks for your insight into pricing and
> availability. Marty Karson<BR><BR><B><I>"Steve B."
> <imperial59@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx></I></B> wrote:
> <BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px;
> BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">
> <META content="Microsoft Word 10 (filtered)" name=Generator>
> <STYLE>
> <!--
> /* Style Definitions */
> p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal
> {margin:0in;
> margin-bottom:.0001pt;
> font-size:12.0pt;
> font-family:"Times New Roman";}
> a:link, span.MsoHyperlink
> {color:blue;
> text-decoration:underline;}
> a:visited, span.MsoHyperlinkFollowed
> {color:purple;
> text-decoration:underline;}
> span.EmailStyle17
> {font-family:Arial;
> color:navy;}
> @page Section1
> {size:8.5in 11.0in;
> margin:1.0in 1.25in 1.0in 1.25in;}
> div.Section1
> {page:Section1;}
> -->
> </STYLE>
>
> <DIV class=Section1>
> <DIV>
> <DIV>
> <DIV>
> <P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN-LEFT: 0.5in"><FONT face="Times New Roman"
> size=3><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE: 12pt">I'm very interested in buying a 1959 -
> 1960 Imperial 4 Door Hardtop.</SPAN></FONT></P>
> <P class=MsoNormal><FONT face=Arial color=navy size=2><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE:
> 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: Arial"></SPAN></FONT> </P>
> <P class=MsoNormal><FONT face=Arial color=navy size=2><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE:
> 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">The prices on the ’59 page are getting
> a bit stale. I will go get a new copy of the pricing guide and updating
> the prices for you or you can get one yourself at most any big book
> store. Old Car Price Guide is the one to look
> for.</SPAN></FONT></P></DIV>
> <DIV>
> <P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN-LEFT: 0.5in"><FONT face="Times New Roman"
> color=navy size=3><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE: 12pt; COLOR:
> navy"></SPAN></FONT> </P>
> <P class=MsoNormal><FONT face=Arial color=navy size=2><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE:
> 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">I see actual selling prices all over
> the place. Watch e-bay and the other on-line places for a while to get a
> feel for the prices. My advice would be to buy the best possible car you
> can find. ’59 and ’60 pieces are extremely rare. NOS is impossible
> to find or priced out of the ballpark and repro stuff just doesn’t
> exist. Lots of pot metal was used and it is costly to refinish. To
> give you an idea of prices two ’59 mirrors recently sold on e-bay. Both
> were NOS and looked to be in perfect shape. The driver side went over
> $500 and the passenger side wasn’t far behind….</SPAN></FONT></P>
> <P class=MsoNormal><FONT face=Arial color=navy size=2><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE:
> 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: Arial"></SPAN></FONT> </P>
> <P class=MsoNormal><FONT face=Arial color=navy size=2><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE:
> 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">The up side to this is that people
> notice the car. My ’59 is pretty much a basket case… Yet I can
> still take my car to the local show and people will run past $40k Chevys to
> come see the old girl with the tattered interior and tired paint. This
> always makes up for the scarcity of parts.</SPAN></FONT></P>
> <P class=MsoNormal><FONT face=Arial color=navy size=2><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE:
> 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: Arial"></SPAN></FONT> </P>
> <P class=MsoNormal><FONT face=Arial color=navy size=2><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE:
> 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY:
> Arial">  
> ;  
> ;  
> ;
> </SPAN></FONT><FONT face=Arial color=navy size=2><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt;
> COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">Steve B.</SPAN></FONT></P>
> <P class=MsoNormal><FONT face=Arial color=navy size=2><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE:
> 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: Arial"></SPAN></FONT> </P>
> <P class=MsoNormal><FONT face=Arial color=navy size=2><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE:
> 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY:
> Arial"></SPAN></FONT> </P></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></BLOCKQUOTE></DIV>
> --0-641031179-1081825324=:3590--
> |
> |
> |
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~IML DIGEST~~~~~~~~~~~~~~MESSAGE SEPARATOR~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> |
> |
> |
>
> Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2004 20:45:09 -0700
> From: "A. Foster" <monkeypuzzle1@xxxxxxx>
> Subject: Re: IML: Actual Current Prices Of 1959 - 1960 Imperial 4 Door
> Hardtops
> Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
>
> --Boundary_(ID_YhtQmeBPgbMOv/DnGLO8XA)
> Content-type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
> Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT
>
> Martin;
> I wouldn't worry about one or two Ebay auctions on 59' parts; all it takes is
> two or three guys to get auction fever and the winner, if he pays up, can wind
> up paying double what something is worth. On top of that some people enter the
> wrong bid amount or don't know the proxy bid system is supposed to work, and
> the odd unscrupulous seller still engages in shill bidding. I have seen some
> items pop up for auction several times that were supposedly sold, likely for
> the above reasons.
> The truth being is that most Imperials use the same rear view mirrors as their
> lesser Chrysler, DeSoto, and sometimes Dodge counterparts. You will find that
> there are other parts that are interchangable as well.
> The best advice that I can give, and this goes with other things as well, is
> to buy the most complete and original car that you can find. Contrary to what
> many might think this can mean a number three rated car or a better number
> four rated car. I also wouldn't worry about a car that has fancy aftermarket
> rims, so long as they didn't mess with the drive train or shave the trim and
> chuck it out. There is an online price guide at this address:
> www.vmrintl.com/cctm/coll_frame.htm
> Unlike some price guides that I have seen they base their values on market
> research and not a theoretical ideal.
> Best Regards
> Arran Foster
> 1954 Imperial Newport
> Needing A Left Side Tailight Bezel and other trim parts.
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Martin Karson
> To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Sent: Monday, April 12, 2004 8:02 PM
> Subject: RE: IML: Actual Current Prices Of 1959 - 1960 Imperial 4 Door
> Hardtops
>
>
> Steve B. thanks for the help. I will follow with the price guides as well
> as E Bay. Had no idea the parts were so out of sight. Many thanks for your
> insight into pricing and availability. Marty Karson
>
> "Steve B." <imperial59@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> I'm very interested in buying a 1959 - 1960 Imperial 4 Door Hardtop.
>
>
>
> The prices on the '59 page are getting a bit stale. I will go get a new copy
> of the pricing guide and updating the prices for you or you can get one
> yourself at most any big book store. Old Car Price Guide is the one to look
> for.
>
>
>
> I see actual selling prices all over the place. Watch e-bay and the other
> on-line places for a while to get a feel for the prices. My advice would be
> to buy the best possible car you can find. '59 and '60 pieces are extremely
> rare. NOS is impossible to find or priced out of the ballpark and repro stuff
> just doesn't exist. Lots of pot metal was used and it is costly to refinish.
> To give you an idea of prices two '59 mirrors recently sold on e-bay. Both
> were NOS and looked to be in perfect shape. The driver side went over $500
> and the passenger side wasn't far behind..
>
>
>
> The up side to this is that people notice the car. My '59 is pretty much a
> basket case. Yet I can still take my car to the local show and people will
> run past $40k Chevys to come see the old girl with the tattered interior and
> tired paint. This always makes up for the scarcity of parts.
>
>
>
> Steve B.
>
>
>
>
>
> --Boundary_(ID_YhtQmeBPgbMOv/DnGLO8XA)
> Content-type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1
> Content-transfer-encoding: quoted-printable
>
> <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
> <HTML><HEAD>
> <META http-equiv=3DContent-Type content=3D"text/html; =
> charset=3Diso-8859-1">
> <META content=3D"MSHTML 6.00.2800.1400" name=3DGENERATOR></HEAD>
> <BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff>
> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2><FONT =
> size=3D3>Martin</FONT>;</FONT></DIV>
> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2> <FONT size=3D3>I wouldn't worry =
> about one or=20
> two Ebay auctions on 59' parts; all it takes is two or three guys to get =
> auction=20
> fever and the winner, if he pays up, can wind up paying double what =
> something is=20
> worth. On top of that some people enter the wrong bid amount or don't =
> know the=20
> proxy bid system is supposed to work, and the odd unscrupulous seller =
> still=20
> engages in shill bidding. I have seen some items pop up for auction =
> several=20
> times that were supposedly sold, likely for the above=20
> reasons.</FONT></FONT></DIV>
> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2><FONT size=3D3> The truth being is =
> that most=20
> Imperials use the same rear view mirrors as their lesser Chrysler, =
> DeSoto, and=20
> sometimes Dodge counterparts. You will find that there are other parts =
> that are=20
> interchangable as well. </FONT></FONT></DIV>
> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2><FONT size=3D3> The best advice =
> that I can give,=20
> and this goes with other things as well, is to buy the most complete and =
>
> original car that you can find. Contrary to what many might think this =
> can mean=20
> a number three rated car or a better number four rated car. I also =
> wouldn't=20
> worry about a car that has fancy aftermarket rims, so long as they =
> didn't=20
> mess with the drive train or shave the trim and chuck it out. There =
> is an=20
> online price guide at this address: <A=20
> href=3D"http://www.vmrintl.com/cctm/coll_frame.htm">www.vmrintl.com/cctm/=
> coll_frame.htm</A></FONT></FONT></DIV>
> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial>Unlike some price guides that I have seen they =
> base their=20
> values on market research and not a theoretical ideal.</FONT></DIV>
> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial>Best Regards</FONT></DIV>
> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial>Arran Foster</FONT></DIV>
> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial>1954 Imperial Newport</FONT></DIV>
> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial>Needing A Left Side Tailight Bezel and other =
> trim=20
> parts.</FONT></DIV>
> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2> </FONT></DIV>
> <BLOCKQUOTE dir=3Dltr=20
> style=3D"PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; =
> BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">
> <DIV style=3D"FONT: 10pt arial">----- Original Message ----- </DIV>
> <DIV=20
> style=3D"BACKGROUND: #e4e4e4; FONT: 10pt arial; font-color: =
> black"><B>From:</B>=20
> <A title=3Dmkei@xxxxxxxxxxxxx =
> href=3D"mailto:mkei@xxxxxxxxxxxxx">Martin Karson</A>=20
> </DIV>
> <DIV style=3D"FONT: 10pt arial"><B>To:</B> <A=20
> title=3Dmailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx=20
> =
> href=3D"mailto:mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx">mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx=
> om</A>=20
> </DIV>
> <DIV style=3D"FONT: 10pt arial"><B>Sent:</B> Monday, April 12, 2004 =
> 8:02=20
> PM</DIV>
> <DIV style=3D"FONT: 10pt arial"><B>Subject:</B> RE: IML: Actual =
> Current Prices=20
> Of 1959 - 1960 Imperial 4 Door Hardtops</DIV>
> <DIV><BR></DIV>
> <DIV>Steve B. thanks for the help. I will follow =
> with the=20
> price guides as well as E Bay. Had no idea the parts were so out =
> of=20
> sight. Many thanks for your insight into pricing and=20
> availability. Marty Karson<BR><BR><B><I>"Steve B." <<A=20
> =
> href=3D"mailto:imperial59@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx">imperial59@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx</A>=
> ></I></B>=20
> wrote:=20
> <BLOCKQUOTE class=3Dreplbq=20
> style=3D"PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px =
> solid">
> <META content=3D"Microsoft Word 10 (filtered)" name=3DGenerator>
> <STYLE>@page Section1 {size: 8.5in 11.0in; margin: 1.0in 1.25in =
> 1.0in 1.25in; }
> P.MsoNormal {
> FONT-SIZE: 12pt; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; FONT-FAMILY: "Times New Roman"
> }
> LI.MsoNormal {
> FONT-SIZE: 12pt; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; FONT-FAMILY: "Times New Roman"
> }
> DIV.MsoNormal {
> FONT-SIZE: 12pt; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; FONT-FAMILY: "Times New Roman"
> }
> A:link {
> COLOR: blue; TEXT-DECORATION: underline
> }
> SPAN.MsoHyperlink {
> COLOR: blue; TEXT-DECORATION: underline
> }
> A:visited {
> COLOR: purple; TEXT-DECORATION: underline
> }
> SPAN.MsoHyperlinkFollowed {
> COLOR: purple; TEXT-DECORATION: underline
> }
> SPAN.EmailStyle17 {
> COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: Arial
> }
> DIV.Section1 {
> page: Section1
> }
> </STYLE>
>
> <DIV class=3DSection1>
> <DIV>
> <DIV>
> <DIV>
> <P class=3DMsoNormal style=3D"MARGIN-LEFT: 0.5in"><FONT =
> face=3D"Times New Roman"=20
> size=3D3><SPAN style=3D"FONT-SIZE: 12pt">I'm very interested in =
> buying a 1959 -=20
> 1960 Imperial 4 Door Hardtop.</SPAN></FONT></P>
> <P class=3DMsoNormal><FONT face=3DArial color=3Dnavy size=3D2><SPAN=20
> style=3D"FONT-SIZE: 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: =
> Arial"></SPAN></FONT> </P>
> <P class=3DMsoNormal><FONT face=3DArial color=3Dnavy size=3D2><SPAN=20
> style=3D"FONT-SIZE: 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">The =
> prices on the=20
> =9259 page are getting a bit stale. I will go get a new copy =
> of the=20
> pricing guide and updating the prices for you or you can get one =
> yourself at=20
> most any big book store. Old Car Price Guide is the one to =
> look=20
> for.</SPAN></FONT></P></DIV>
> <DIV>
> <P class=3DMsoNormal style=3D"MARGIN-LEFT: 0.5in"><FONT =
> face=3D"Times New Roman"=20
> color=3Dnavy size=3D3><SPAN=20
> style=3D"FONT-SIZE: 12pt; COLOR: navy"></SPAN></FONT> </P>
> <P class=3DMsoNormal><FONT face=3DArial color=3Dnavy size=3D2><SPAN=20
> style=3D"FONT-SIZE: 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">I see =
> actual=20
> selling prices all over the place. Watch e-bay and the other =
> on-line=20
> places for a while to get a feel for the prices. My advice =
> would be to=20
> buy the best possible car you can find. =9259 and =9260 pieces =
> are=20
> extremely rare. NOS is impossible to find or priced out of the =
>
> ballpark and repro stuff just doesn=92t exist. Lots of pot =
> metal was=20
> used and it is costly to refinish. To give you an idea of =
> prices two=20
> =9259 mirrors recently sold on e-bay. Both were NOS and looked =
> to be in=20
> perfect shape. The driver side went over $500 and the =
> passenger side=20
> wasn=92t far behind=85.</SPAN></FONT></P>
> <P class=3DMsoNormal><FONT face=3DArial color=3Dnavy size=3D2><SPAN=20
> style=3D"FONT-SIZE: 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: =
> Arial"></SPAN></FONT> </P>
> <P class=3DMsoNormal><FONT face=3DArial color=3Dnavy size=3D2><SPAN=20
> style=3D"FONT-SIZE: 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">The up =
> side to this=20
> is that people notice the car. My =9259 is pretty much a =
> basket=20
> case=85 Yet I can still take my car to the local show and =
> people will=20
> run past $40k Chevys to come see the old girl with the tattered =
> interior and=20
> tired paint. This always makes up for the scarcity of=20
> parts.</SPAN></FONT></P>
> <P class=3DMsoNormal><FONT face=3DArial color=3Dnavy size=3D2><SPAN=20
> style=3D"FONT-SIZE: 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: =
> Arial"></SPAN></FONT> </P>
> <P class=3DMsoNormal><FONT face=3DArial color=3Dnavy size=3D2><SPAN=20
> style=3D"FONT-SIZE: 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: =
> Arial"> =
> &=
> nbsp; &n=
> bsp; &nb=
> sp; =20
> </SPAN></FONT><FONT face=3DArial color=3Dnavy size=3D2><SPAN=20
> style=3D"FONT-SIZE: 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">Steve=20
> B.</SPAN></FONT></P>
> <P class=3DMsoNormal><FONT face=3DArial color=3Dnavy size=3D2><SPAN=20
> style=3D"FONT-SIZE: 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: =
> Arial"></SPAN></FONT> </P>
> <P class=3DMsoNormal><FONT face=3DArial color=3Dnavy size=3D2><SPAN=20
> style=3D"FONT-SIZE: 10pt; COLOR: navy; FONT-FAMILY: =
> Arial"></SPAN></FONT> </P></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></BLOCKQUOTE></DIV=
>> </BLOCKQUOTE></BODY></HTML>
>
> --Boundary_(ID_YhtQmeBPgbMOv/DnGLO8XA)--
> |
> |
> |
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~IML DIGEST~~~~~~~~~~~~~~MESSAGE SEPARATOR~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> |
> |
> |
>
> Date: Tue, 13 Apr 2004 02:18:07 -0400
> From: RandalPark@xxxxxxx
> Subject: Re: IML: 392 in pieces
> Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> I don't know how you can tell that a cracked block got that way by freezing or
> by overheating. I know that the block in my '65 Imperial was cracked when I
> got it. It never leaked, but it was a BIG crack. It had come from over heating
> and there was other evidence as well, such as broken rings, bearing damage,
> and , oh yes, the proverbial characteristic remains of a mammoth trailer
> hitch.
>
> I replaced mine. I don't think that I would ever repair or pay to have
> repaired a cracked cylinder block unless a replacement was absolutely
> unobtainable. I know that they can be fixed and if done right, very well, in
> fact. The trouble is, not only would it not be as good as a block that was
> never cracked in the first place, but I would always know that it was cracked.
> If I had to sell the car, I would never feel right about it unless I told
> everyone. Guess what, then they probably wouldn't buy it.
>
> I highly recommend that you replace your block, Hugh. It will be a better
> engine job in the long run.
>
> Paul
>
> In a message dated 4/12/2004 10:38:56 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
> hugtrees@xxxxxxxx writes:
>
>>
>>
>> Hi folks,
>>
>> I got to se my 58's 392 Hemi in pieces today. Fascinating stuff. I'm
>> pinched for time this second but can say I was right, it needed a ring job.
>> The cylinder walls look fine but there is some scarring on one or two of the
>> pistons and also on the bearings that attach to the crank shaft. They gave
>> me a list of desirable actions to take from this point but . . .
>>
>> There is a huge crack in the block !!!! It's old, very old and does not
>> seem to have reached the cylinders. They want to take the block to a shop
>> and find out the best thing to do with it. It probably reaches the water
>> jacket but I know for a fact it doesn't leak.
>>
>> I thought the car had been seriously worked on before. This kind of damage
>> comes from freezing, not over heating so it is not related to the cracked
>> head of a few years ago.
>>
>> I took some pictures of the engine and of the car, which looks very high up
>> in the front end, for some reason! Getting heat from the "boss." Gotta go.
>>
>> Hugh
>>
>>
>>
>>