Where did you find a '60 LeBaron wheel cover, Dave? At $300.00 it was probably a bargain! I also have one of those cars, and I am very lucky to have a single spare that is not for sale. I found it in the locked trunk of a '60 LeBaron in a wrecking yard. I had to crawl into the trunk through the opening behind the back seat to get it. The yard was in rattlesnake country and I was told was very dangerous. I had done that to three other junked LeBarons over a period of six years and only found one wheel cover. It was very frustrating since those four cars would each have originally had four wheel covers, which made a total of 16. Finding only one was real slim pickin's! Paul In a message dated 6/24/2004 6:32:11 PM Eastern Daylight Time, dave-tracy.sherratt@xxxxxxxxxxxx writes: > Don, I lost one of my Le Baron ones in a similar circumstance years ago. I >think that at all you can do is to pull back with some pliers the insides >where they grip with the wheel.I Hope that will help you out. A Loss of a >hubcap can be a very expensive thing , the replacement for my Le Baron was >over 300 bucks !. > Regards > Dave. > ----- Original Message ----- > From: DONALDDICKINSOND@xxxxxx > To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Sent: Thursday, June 24, 2004 10:45 PM > Subject: IML: My 60 mph hubcap! > > > I was heading south on I71 toward the city, with the top down (beautiful >day), to show off my car to some former employees. Then a horrible metallic >racket that scared the living you know what out of me. I quickly pulled over >and my right front hubcap that was following me passed me at 60 mph then >suddenly crossed the median and slammed into the guardrail on the North bound >side. Needless to say my hubcap that I recently refurbished was a total loss. > Does anyone have a > foolproof method of keeping these hub caps on? > > > Don Dickinson > Prospect, KY > > 1955 Imperial Newport, Canyon Tan and Desert Sand > 1967 Imperial Custom Convertible, Ivory and Burgundy