First of all thank you for specifically asking one or all four of us you mentioned. I feel like I'm some sort of official "expert" now rather than just another guy trying to figure out AMCs. The white 70 Javelin was backed into in the late 1970s in Sioux Falls, SD by a 15 yr old kid who just got his license. He put his car in gear without using the brake and had way to much throttle in use at the time. Cars back then didn't require foot on brake for transmission in gear sequence. I was standing across the street outside a store and witnessed the whole thing. So anyway the Javelin needed a new front bumper and grille. I have recently acquired additional undamaged parts (brackets never bent, the ones for the grille), as the original bracket were never accurately straightened by the body shop. I now have three rear bumpers and two front bumpers for 70 Javelin/AMX. The bumper on the car now, has been straightened and was replated in the late 70s. It has several, and I mean several "thump marks" on the inside of the bumper that are not visible from the face. These thump marks are straight lines about two or three inches long and are in series across the inside. It does not fit the White 70 Javelin perfect, but it is not two inches off.......... For a bumper to be that far off, I would say, the front of the car is way out of whack, the re-chromer did not do his homework when straightening the replacement bumper, or you have the wrong bumper.... Now, the 70 has a very large very unique bumper, it only fits on 70s or earlier Javelin/AMX that have had 70 front grille, headlight brows, fender extensions and so on transplanted to it. I'm not 100% sure but at least 90% sure that 68 and 69 are the same. The statement, "No two AMX bumpers are alike" is pure B.S. All of them, year for year, and model for model, are exactly alike, down to a small tolerance. Or, at least were when the part was stamped at the factory. I would venture to guess that all 68 and 69 bumpers were made from the same stamping die and machine. All the rear bumpers from 68 to 74 were identical, when they were stamped. AMC did not use multiple stamping dies to make 40,000 front bumpers, nor even 140,000 rear bumpers. The dies may have been repaired if damaged during production, but they would have been repaired to original specification. I would also be very shocked if each and every replater has all sorts of "blocks" for all sorts of cars. That just doesn't sound feasible. I would say that a good replater can tell when the bumper is pretty much back to original shape or at least close enough that fitment shouldn't be too far off. To be two inches off at the top sounds pretty hard to believe. Now if the bumper didn't fit right because the angle across the front when looking straight down at the bumper was off, I would believe that. But to be off two inches at the top, I would think the bumper would be so misshapen that it would be obvious that it was wrong. Just my opinion, and it doesn't mean squat............... Armand ----- Original Message ----- From: "bikerfox" <bikerfox@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: <amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Friday, February 20, 2009 11:32 PM Subject: [Amc-list] AMX bumper question for experts only! > This question is primarily for Joe, Frank, Nick, or Armand, but feel free to reply if you have experience in the task below: > > A '68 AMX accident-free front bumper was recently acquired from an allegedly reputable AMC source and was sent out for re-chroming--the old bumper was unusable and was trashed (trust me, it was unusable). The newly acquired bumper was guaranteed uninvolved in an accident or bent. The newly plated bumper came back and didn't fit the front of the vehicle by two inches (I believe it was the top of the bumper that was the issue)! Again, the bumper seller claimed the bumper was in "excellent used condition." I was told by the bumper seller that the plating shop didn't do its duty in "blocking" the bumper before replating and checking the fitment of the bumper prior. The bumper seller also claims that plating shops have "forms" or "molds" that bumpers can fit into and thus the plating shop can check the straightness of the bumper before replating. The bumper seller claims that no two AMX bumpers are alike and if switching one AMX bumper to another AMX, this "blocking" procedur > e must always be done to ensure good fitment. The body shop claims that the bumper seller gave them a bumper that was off by two inches due to a bumper accident, although upon intial inspection before replating, the bumper appeared to be accident-free, with no apparent "witness marks.." The body shop has never heard of "blocking" a bumper before replating and didn't test fit the new bumper prior to replating. The plating shop is closed for the weekend. What are the facts/fallacies of this situation? Who's to blame? Who's right? > > Thanks, > > Bumperless Steve > > -- > I am using the free version of SPAMfighter. > We are a community of 6 million users fighting spam. > SPAMfighter has removed 1374 of my spam emails to date. > Get the free SPAMfighter here: http://www.spamfighter.com/len > > The Professional version does not have this message > -------------- next part -------------- > An HTML attachment was scrubbed... > URL: http://splatter.wps.com/pipermail/amc-list/attachments/20090220/830ccf0c/attachment.htm > _______________________________________________ > Amc-list mailing list > Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx > http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list > > > > -- > No virus found in this incoming message. > Checked by AVG. > Version: 7.5.552 / Virus Database: 270.11.2/1963 - Release Date: 2/20/09 7:22 PM > > _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list