1973 weak spots: 1. Climate controls. They are bad on virtually ALL cars. There is a thing in the engine compartment that looks like a black plastic gaurd tower. It is supposed to be automatic but has a faulty design and fails. Fixing it will likely cost $300 for parts at the least. There is much to be learned about it by looking in the club archives by looking for "auto temp II". DO NOT GET ANOTHER FACTORY UNIT. Only the aluminum bodied aftermarket one will be worth spending money on. That or getting a manual control (exact fit) for the dash and putting it in. --- 2. Trim, glass, & interior. If it's missing or torn, be prepared to have a tough time finding a replacement, although Bob Hoffmeister seems to be relatively well stocked. ---- 3. Clock on dash rarely works but is easy to fix if removed and the works cleaned. See archives/club site. I left mine dead. Makes a horribly loud ticking noise that someone supposedly got fired for not engineering correctly to be appropriately quiet. ---- 4. Steering wheel horn button is a soft rubber strip on the inside of the steering wheel. It often is inoperative or torn up. Hard to get but not impossible. --- 5. Headlight door motor gets sticky over time if not used regularly. Manually operate using the knob on the bottom of the motor in front of the radiator to open/close HL covers for some time. It will come back and does not need replacement. Make certain it's plugged in first... --- The good news is that most of the mechanicals on the car are common and easy to get as they were shared with other chrysler products. The sheetmetal is going to be a tough thing to ship overseas, so check that the car is straight. Go get that car if it seems straight! If it does not appear to have new shocks, replace them and get ready to redefine luxury to your social circle. That car handles more like a modern vehicle than the older ones, and can be tremendously enjoyable, especially on the highway or autobahn. Oh, and get used to not having to move over for anything else with four wheels besides city busses. This car has real presence. When you take your time yeilding or doing things and other motorists pull up beside you to give you the evil eye, look back and rub your dash in an exaggerated, loving fashion to communicate that you just don't really HAVE to care what they think about your road real-estate ownership. --- j.linssen2@xxxxxxxxx wrote: > Dear Imperial-lovers, > > Let me fist start with a short introduction. I am > Jacques from Holland, and a big fan of full sized > Mopars. I currently drive a solid '67 Newport > Custom Coupe (see > <http://www.cardomain.com/memberpage/408100>). I am > very happy wth this car, but actually, I want > something bigger and more luxurious. > > Now, I have an opportunity to possibly trade my > current car for a '73 Imperial Le Baron which looks > quite good a first glance. > > It has a rebuilt transmission and a rebuilt '69 > 440-engine in it, it runs and shifts very well. > > Are there any specific weak point or known troubles > with these cars that I should specifically watch out > for? My main concern is all the electrics on the > car, what are the known indications that something > might go wrong on short term? > > I would appreciate all your comments and advice. > > Thank you very much in advance for your replies. > > Best regards, > > Jacques. > > > > ----------------- http://www.imperialclub.com > ----------------- > This message was sent to you by the Imperial Mailing > List. Please > reply to mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and your > response will be > shared with everyone. Private messages (and > attachments) for the > Administrators should be sent to > webmaster@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > To UN-SUBSCRIBE, go to > http://imperialclub.com/unsubscribe.htm > > Kenyon Wills ----------------- http://www.imperialclub.com ----------------- This message was sent to you by the Imperial Mailing List. Please reply to mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and your response will be shared with everyone. Private messages (and attachments) for the Administrators should be sent to webmaster@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To UN-SUBSCRIBE, go to http://imperialclub.com/unsubscribe.htm