From: MSN Nicknamefordamc (Original Message) Sent: 1/19/2006 8:33 PM I too have a Bayshore blue Machine with a blue interior. It took a long time to restore the interior, it got to the point where I was ready to give up & sell the car. But I stuck with it & the end result looks good. Check out the PICTURES part of this site & go back to page 2. There are a couple of pictures of my Machine interior posted. To paint hard parts in the interior (dashboard, kick panels with vents, front inside metal trim around the window, package shelf, rear sail panels, steering wheel) use PPG Duracryl Acrylic Lacquer # 13814 Blue metallic. A good auto body supply store should be able to mix this for you. To paint soft interior parts (door panels, seats, door arm rests, seat backs, dash pad) use SEM vinyl dye elastomeric coating #1625 Silver Blue metallic. Again, a good auto body supply store can mix this for you. Buy a can of PPG vinyl conditioner # UK 405 and use according to the directions on the can before you spray the vinyl dye. This stuff works great when used correctly. Door panels are a huge problem on blue interior cars. I looked for 12 years before I found any, & what I found were in poor condition. The problem is that blue interior panels (seats are different too) have a different grain than the black or tan interior cars. So, you can't dye black or tan ones blue if you want the interior to be correct. That makes it much harder to find them. The panels I found were blue, but had been painted black. The front panels had a backing board that had completely deteriorated, the back panels were decent. The vinyl on the front panels was also very wrinkled, affecting the panels about 1/3 of the way up. I started restoring them by removing the rotten backing boards. Save them for patterns for the new backing boards!! I then started carefully scrubbing the black paint off of the panels with a toothbrush, a stainless steel toothbrush, & brake fluid. Brake fluid is the only thing that will soften the paint but not destroy the vinyl. This trick works great on painted plastic too, by the way. After tons of hours I had most of the paint off. I had to sparingly use PPG UK 405 to clean the remainder off. You have to be really careful with this product when cleaning with it as it can soften the vinyl & damage it. I then used an iron (like you use for clothes, DON'T tell my girlfriend I did this!!!) to carefully smooth out the wrinkles. Next, I bought two different thicknesses of door panel backer board from a local upholstery shop. I cut out the base first, then used the thinner board to create the raised parts of the panel. I glued it all together with contact cement. Then I carefully glued the vinyl onto the new board, using contact cement, gluing about 4" at a time. When all this was done I sprayed the panels with the SEM dye. If the two chrome stripes are missing from the top of the panels, use 1/4" chrome pinstriping, from the auto body supply store. I would guess that I have 80 hours total in the restoration of these panels. Seats are a problem too. The companies that deal in old NOS upholstery material don't have any of the blue used in the Machine left. Legendary Auto Interiors does reproduce both of the types of vinyl used on Machine seats in blue. I used their product & it looks great & has held up great. A local upholstery shop made the covers for me. The bad thing is that Legendary has the worst customer service I have ever experienced. Expect lots of delays & broken promises when dealing with them. But, after years of looking, they are the only people I could find for this stuff. I have samples of this material, email me if you want a sample. That is all I can think of right now. If you have any questions, ask!! Scott === === milnersXcoupe NEW YORK _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com