-- Frank Swygert <farna@xxxxxxx> wrote: > I thought you might be "unintentionally" exagerating, but knowing about > the 440H arm rests I wanted to make sure. Saw the photos, it's > definitely the stock sedan seat. IIRC there was a cardboard piece (door > panel material) behind the seat stuck to the body originally, may have > just been a piece of water dam paper (craft paper with a black "tar" > coating on one side, usually used behind door panels). It's of course possible that there was one; there's no sticky residue, but likely it was cardboard-ish and hung on the mounting bolts. No evidence of it, so some PO removed it. The gap is pretty large, 1.5" or more. Odd. > there were two hardtops, the 440 (like yours) and the 440H. $2136 for > yours, $2281 for the H. $145 got you those rear arm rests and the 2V > "Power Pak" stock. On the 440 it was an option. Most of the hardtops > I've seen have been the "H" model, probably because most dealers ordered > the top of the line car dressed up, and more of the "dolled up" ones > probably survive, as is usually the case. "The Standard Catalog of AM" > says 9,749 of the H was built, 5,101 440s (both hardtops, of course) -- > just under twice the number of H models compared to 440. So numbers help > too. Ahh, that explains it then. It appears that this car was special-ordered then, as it's such an odd combination of features. I would think a top of the line 440H would probably one or more of the following: radio, power steering, power brakes, A/C, whatever package the rear arm rests came in, etc. But this one had radio delete, manual everything; yet twin stick and 2 barrel carb("powerpak"). If two bbl and fancy rear seat was $145, then 2bbl alone must have been less? So it was ordered by someone with Rambler mentality... :-) It's an odd thing to order in 1963, the fastest model of one of the slowest cars made in America... ! _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list