Those seat belts can easily be restored to their
intended color. Just invest the $2.49 for a bottle of
Rit Dye! It's available at any WalMart and many other
stores.
I re-dyed the blue seat belts on my '71 Imperial
earlier this year (along with the door panel carpets).
I simply mixed some of the dye with hot water in a
generic spray bottle and went to work. It was MUCH
easier than I had expected and turned out great.
Elijah
--- Rog & Jan van Hoy <vanhilla@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> I think the black die fades as they get older.
>
> I don't think many new car buyers would accept
> blue-green seat belts in their luxury cars.
>
> --Roger van Hoy, '55 DeSoto, '42 DeSoto, '66
> Plymouth, '81 Imperial, Washougal, WA
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: jsadowski
> To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Sent: Wednesday, July 24, 2002 11:05 PM
> Subject: Re: IML: Seat belt surprise
>
>
> I think thats just the way they did it back then.
> My 69 has black seats & dark green belts.I've seen
> many other Mopars around that era with black seats &
> having green belts.
> John
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Billimp68@xxxxxxx
> To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Sent: Monday, July 22, 2002 4:04 AM
> Subject: Re: IML: Seat belt surprise
>
>
> Tim,
>
> Speaking of Imperial Seat Belts, the Chrysler
> employee who installed these belts must have been
> color blind. One of my 68 Crown Coupes, which has a
> gray exterior and a black interior, has blue green
> seat belts.
>
> Bill/Imp, 68's
>
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