TomJ: (I always fantasize about fitting a 58-59 American mono-gauge dash in it...) ------------------ Frank: So what's stopping you? To sweeten the idea, some suppliers make an all electronic early CJ speedo/gauge cluster (all in one 5" or so pod) that should fit -- or can be fitted. I think it would definitely be a conversation piece, especially since one is more likely to find a newer model dash grafted into an old car, not so much the other way around. If you really hate the dash, just pull it and make a flat metal cover for the defroster duct and such, and mount an old 50 or so Nash "monopod" on the column! ;> ------------------ TomJ: I think this quality problem exists in other American cars of the era, I don't really know if AMC was better or worse. It's not simply the increased amount of plastic; the plastic in the '63 is still good! there was an overall thinning of wear margins all around that makes them "tinnier". I bought a 76 Hornet, then a 77 AMX, brand new off the showroom floor, and both were squeaky and noisy in ways that 20+ years later I now know were by design (because I've learned more and have taken apart/built identical models). ------------------- Frank: I agree -- all 70s US cars suffer quality problems, and that's one reason people started turning to foreign makes, especially for small economy cars. The US producers, even AMC (which had the most economy experience), just weren't ready to deliver decent small cars. There's very little difference in costs to build a small car vs. a large one, for one thing. Some of the dies are larger, and there's a bit more material, but all the labor is about the same. The material and tooling cost is really insignificant. There's more perceived value in a larger car -- it's hard to sell a small car with the same profit margin as a larger one because people just don't feel they're getting much for their money. So selling small cars just isn't (wasn't) as profitable. That perception has changed a bit now, people are willing to look at features and styling as much as size, but it's still there to a degree. I think the manufacturers had some lessons to learn about substituting plastic for metal in the early 70s Tom. Today's cars use more plastic and have much less squeaks. Even a Concord isn't as bad as a Hornet -- but the move up-scale meant it couldn't be. So there was a learning curve. --------------------- Tom: My 63 Classic, and the 62 Ambo, the 59 American, had their share of old-car-itis and designed-in skimpy brakes etc, but fit'n'finish was/is excellent. Repairability, maintainability, documentation, etc were/are all better. ----------------------- Frank: Well, as far as the brakes and mechanicals are concerned, I think you're comparing apples to oranges. Driving conditions and expectations were much different when those cars came out than they are today. Even great brakes in the early sixties are probably barely adequate for today. A 172.6 flathead powering a 1950 Rambler convertible made it "spunky", a laughable description if you drove the car today -- my 195.6 flathead powered 61 American sedan (virtually the same car under the skin, thought the convert was a little heavier), even after the engine was rebuilt, could be described as "adequate" with OD and a 4.11 rear axle, but never would I have called it "spunky"!! I have to agree 100% on (most) repairs, maintenance, and docs. The 61 American owner's manual has everything needed to maintain the car, no shop manual needed for anything but major repairs! The later ones weren't as good though. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list