Hi list, Being land locked with the sea being only 1400-3000 miles away. This depends which way you go. I have never seen or used a marine chrome polish. The only boat in my neighbourhood is my Imperial! Is there a website that a person can get this polish? What brand seems to be the best? All of us with the land yacht await your answer! RC Billings, Montanaaaaaa --- Sherman D Taffel <staffel@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi list! On every 'list' and in every club there is > this dichotomy of > opinions on whether certain mods are 'upgrades' or > the'butchering' of a > period production historical vehicle, which > certainly our Imperials are. Be > that as it may, Jay Leno's 55 Buick is certainly not > stock with Vetter front > 7 rear subframes and the 650hp crate engine. It is > a beautiful car but not > stock. The body & interior are 'period'- looks > stock. As a Jaguar Concours > Judge, I can appreciate both approaches, but the > Jensen Community is always > seeking 'improvemnets' for these fine Road Touring > vehicles-the British > 'equivalent' of our Imperials with their Chrysler > drivetrains and mass so > simlar to Imperials, not to mention Rolls Royce > crafted interiors.. Laurence > and I intend to really drive our Imperial, using it > as it was intended, as a > fine distance cruiser. Our first > adventure,'collecting it' up will be this > weekend! > > As for the Safety issue of Park in a GM tranny > swap in a 57 (59?) > Imperial, all of the early Jensen Interceptors used > Chrysler 383/727 > Torqueflites as STOCK from the 1960's- thru 1972 > when 440's were used with > the 727 thru the 1976 end of production. My > Interceptor has a console > mounted Shifter with a park position. Since the > basic Torqueflite in > 50's/60's Imperials is probably (help me out here) > the same gear ratios as > the later units with the park- why not consider at > least a later Chrysler > Torqueflite mod? They are the most bulletproof > reliable tranny ever made!! > Thius is where Chrysler excelled, even in the 50's > and 60's, when body > quality was 'an issue'. Chrysler had Drivetrain > Engineering reliablity. I'm > sure a 2ndary cable for the park position could be > engineered, keeping the > unique pushbuttons functional. > > On the other hand, I know that modern Land Rovers > STILL use a drum parking > brake on the drivetrain, so the Imperial legacy of > Emergency /parking brakes > is NOT DEFUNCT! As collector car owners surely > keeping that brake properly > adjusted for safety should not be an insurmountable > maintenance item. It is > my first issue on the '56 Dodge (enjoyable 'Magic > Touch' pushbutton Drive > thank you). Now since the drivers door key lock > doesn't work, I often wonder > about if 'someone' played with the brake-with the > car on an incline. So I > make sure I don't park it on an incline... > > Also, I use Marine Chrome polish on my Vintage Cars. > The Marine formula > (available in Marine stores everywhere) contains a > good cleaner that gets > those rust pits AND some petro oil film, that > provides more protection from > the elements-especially those tint pits. In fact > most of those tiny > pitscan't even be seen until your only 2" away For > what its worth. > My 2c plain.... > > Sherman D.Taffel > Columbia MD > '63 Imperial Crown Convert > '74 Jensen Interceptor Convert > '56 Dodge Coronet 4 dr sedan (drivetrain Emergency > brake) > Other 60's,70's,80's, & 90's British & CryCo's > > > > >