I have been having some fun with the 63 Rambler American hardtop this weekend. I need to get the car running so it is easy to move in and out of my driveway and would not be blocking other cars. In a perfect world, this car can be a replacement daily driver to replace the 1980 Spirit that I finally sold last week. I was intially surprised that the car ran when I brought it home. The last license sticker was 1990 but that sticker was on new CA replacement plates (which I found in the trunk) so I don't know if the car was actually on the road in 1990. There appeared to be fresh oil in the crankcase (amber color, not black) and it had a new air cleaner element and new tires all the way around. It ran but there was a coolant leak in the "crossover" pipe which runs under the exhaust manifold back to the heater core inlet on the firewall. I had to block off that opening for now, until I have time to remove the obstructions and replace that pipe. After getting it running, I found that the carb needs a rebuild because of the faulty accelerator pump. Friday I gave up on the existing WCD carburetor and decided to use another spare WCD which was in the trunk of the car, along with several other spare parts. I had a little trouble removing the old carb because the manifold studs were left almost too long and getting access to the nuts was difficult on one side. After degreasing the exterior of the replacement carb yesterday and installing it, the car started and ran better and most importantly it didn't stall on acceleration like it did with the old carb. I had ruined the carb to manifold gasket when I installed the new carb so I made a new one out of rather thin gasket paper. I could tell I had some vacuum leaks at the end of the day, which prevented a good smooth idle. Today, I used some RTV around the base of the carb as a temporary measure until I could make a better gasket and I reset the idle mixture to account for the better vacuum. The result was a factory smooth steady idle. Next step was to try to feed gas from the gas tank instead of an auxilliary can. I put a few gallons of gas in the tank along with some carb cleaner and found out the fuel pump would not deliver fuel from the tank. So I emptied the gas tank of the old gas and dropped it down to have a look. Lots of varnish but not much rust, from what I can see. The sender unit was all gunked up and had no sock filter on the end, allowing the suction pipe to be full of old varnish and dirt. I have a replacement sender unit (also from the trunk of that car) and plan to put it in tomorrow after cleaning the tank. Hope to be on the road by tomorrow at noon. I always enjoy waking one of these old cars from the dead, and this one has been fun so far to work with. I did spot some corrosion in the unibody structure almost directly underneath the front suspension. I think the area can be patched fairly easily. If I get it running dependably tomorrow I'll start cleaning the interior and other appearance items. Joe Fulton Salinas CA _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com