Group, Wayne's message brings up what is (to me anyway) the strangest aspect of 'concours' judging ... the obligation to preserve for posterity all the things that the maker got wrong when the car was new. If the bumper irons in 1957 were too weak to hold the bumper in position, and the engineers recognized this and rectified it in 1958, what is the virtue of insisting on installing the faulty irons on a concours car? One assumes that any 1957 car which got nerfed or the bumper started sagging got the heavier brackets on the spot. I have a video on Camaro Pace Cars in which it is pointed out that, in order to get a really high score in a concours, you have to use the same cheap, lousy undercarriage paint that the cost accountants at GM foisted on the cars when new. I guess this preserves for posterity the unfortunate fact that the accountants ruled GM, and posterity can glory in the fact that the cheap paint still looks bad, falls off, and allows the car to rot out ... just like the original! Different strokes, as they say, but I have yet to understand how 'bad' becomes 'good' when it gets old ... Cheers, Doug