ordering tomorrowI can’t get enough of the sound of mine. I hope you’re as happy if you get them.
ordering tomorrowI can’t get enough of the sound of mine. I hope you’re as happy if you get them.
Dash pad removal.. speaker removal, glovebox insert and mouse/squirrel crap, etc...
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Theoretically you have to pull the windshield to remove the dash frame, not the dash pad. Once the cluster and glove box are out of the way you can get to the nuts/ bolts that hold the pad on. The bolts holding the dash frame to the cowl go in from the top which is why you have to pull the windshield, but I have heard of people cutting the bolts from the bottom side to get around that.Did you have to remove the windshield to get the upper dash pad out???
Jeff
Removed the wiper motor, pivots, and wiper arms. The drivers side pivot was completely seized, which explains why the wipers didn’t work. The couple of times I tested the wipers, I’d see the slightest stammer in the arms, then id shut it down right away. It took three days of soaking in wd-40, and a vice and a heavy hammer to free it up, little by little each day. Both are spinning freely now. I may tap a grease zerk into the housing like others have done, not sure yet. Replacement bushings, etc will be needed. I’ll also be cleaning (wire wheel) up the wiper arms.
I also bench tested the motor at various speeds, as well as the “ park” position. The manual tells you all you need to know here.
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Here are some dash painting pics... I used Eastman Trim Black, which is really great stuff and dries to a nice uniform satin finish. I taped over the VIN plate because I want to leave that with the original patina, as well as keep the embossing and Chrysler printing intact.
Getting a good seal at the interface of the dash and windshield took some extra care. The shape of the cardboard, along with some finely folded paint paper led to no overspray getting to the window.
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Thank you!Hey Jeff. Thanks! Beautiful car you have there!
Good question, and one I’ve been trying to figure out myself, since it had been a while. Your question made me search for a confirmation email containing “foam” instead of “padding,” which I was originally looking for.
So... both the foam and covers were ordered from Classic Industries. The covers were a recent purchase and the box said “Legendary.” But not sure what the foam box said, as these were purchased last Fall. the foam looks exactly like the Classic foam (compared to website pics), however. Ideally, you’d get the covers and foam from the same place.
I’m thinking the slack (caused by pulling hard to take up front slack) in the fabric that had to be taken up in the back might be due to insufficient foam thickness at the sides and coming around the back. As I pulled apart the passenger seat last night, I noticed that the foam was generally MUCH thicker from the original factory construction. That goes for the front of the seat as well. The lack of backer board may have also contributed to too much slack at the top. I’ll find out with the passenger seat. The beauty of this construction is that you can pull them apart and add padding, etc to fix anything.
More precise instructions:
- Mark the backbone wires on the burlap/frame where the listing wires will attach (this will tell you exactly where they are when looking down through the slot). Make sure these run approximately with step #3 below, the listing wire sleeve measurements.
- Insert listing wires into seat cover sleeves and measure the length of the wires (this is the length of your foam cut).
- Measure separation of listing wire sleeves at top and bottom of cover
- Transfer top and bottom separation/distance measurements to the foam (Center the separation measurements between guidelines if needed) and make dots.
- Draw a straight line between the dots and cut!
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