I was even further off my rocker. When I bought my 73 it had not been started since the late 80's. It was in a garage during this time and a friend of mine and I rented a car one way down to Florida to pick it up. At any rate, I used AAA to come and pull the car out of the garage and inflate the tires and put some fresh gas in the tank and carb. After I checked all the fluids it fired right up with lots of oil smoke. We then drove it from Jacksonville Florida to Washington D.C. The only problem I had was a tire that lost its tread. So, we stopped in Florence S.C. for new tires. That was about a year ago and ny wife still says I was crazy for "tempting fate". I loved the ride up I-95. Lots of people blowing their horns and giving us the thumbs up. One person in a Jeep shouted "nice car" when I passed him. Tim Durrer 73 Blue Sky --- "Hugh, 58 Imperial" <imperial58@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Thank goodness you didn't do what I did. My car had > sat idle for years in a large museum shed in San > Antonio with no climate control. I was in conflict > with the old fogies running the place and, with a > Vietnam vet with a lot of issues, decided to fire up > the most useless vehicle on the property. Hah! > That'll show 'em. We put water in the radiator, > installed a hot battery and simply fired the thing > up after maybe fifteen years of just sitting there. > Man, I don't think I've ever seen so much oily smoke > from one vehicle. It was spectacular!. There is a > dark stain on the wall right behind where the car > used to sit. So, what the hey, I put it into gear > and tried to drive it outside. As I now know, brake > fluid is hydroscopic and the stuff in the 58 had > first expanded, turned to the consistency of wet > sugar, oozed past the brake cylinders and dried on > the shoes themselves. All this to say the car would > hardly move without stalling every half revolution > of the wheels. But I did manage, certainly more by > luck than judgment, to get the thing outside, which > was our main goal. I have never been so proud of an > empty parking space in my life. I can still feel > the thrill of it today. > > Now, of course, I'm the old fogey running the place > and I would kill anyone who did what I did. I > discovered that getting the engine to run was the > easiest part of any restoration effort. You get to > the top of the mountain only to find a range of > steeper, taller mountains off into the horizon. The > car suffered no serious ill effects from my less > than clever behavior. It's current condition came > when the lower radiator hose split at highway speed > at least ten years later. > > Hugh > ----- Original Message ----- > From: David Dimitriou > To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Sent: Tuesday, July 03, 2007 11:23 AM > Subject: IML: The Moment of Truth > > > I bought my 57 about a month ago. The story went > like this. > > "For sale, low mileage 1957 Imperial complete with > original 392 Hemi. Was running when parked some > years ago." > > OK so I bit hard after succumbing to some serious > Hemi Fever. I wasn't delirious, but I did pay. After > a 4 hour long drive to go pick it up and a very > arduous time (four flats) getting it onto the > trailer I had it. And then I brought my prize home. > > So it did indeed appear that it actually could be > what it had said it was. I am somewhat observant and > noticed the following which seem to support the > advertised description. > > Odometer -- 54,538 > Brake and Accelerator pedals have almost no wear > Original upholstery - slightly worn, but cooked by > the Texas sun > Battery - charged fine, and holding > A/C Compressor, Power Steering, Water Pump and > Generator all spin nicely and all have good belts. > > After soaking the tops of the cylinders for nearly > a month with Marvel Mystery Oil, today was the day. > The day to try and see if the engine could be turn > over by hand. > > OK, so drum roll please... > > Tada! The 392 turns over smooth and sweet by hand > with good strong compression. Yes I know it's > probably not all that spectacular or miraculous. And > of course I certainly could encounter some > unpleasant surprises when I do try to fire it up. So > far though I am quite pleased. > > I'd like to hear from others that have awakened > slumbering giants like my 392 what measures they > employed. I do plan on trying to clean as much gum > and varnish out as I can. I don't intend to remove > or overhaul the motor. At least not at this point. > So if you have any suggestions I'd love to hear > them. I'm sure there are a few good tricks out there > to deal with long dry seals and other hazards > associated with extended periods of inactivity. > > regards, > Dave > 1957 Custom Southampton 4 Door > 1958 Sedan > 1962 Crown Southampton 4 Door > > > ____________________________________________________________________________________ Looking for earth-friendly autos? Browse Top Cars by "Green Rating" at Yahoo! Autos' Green Center. http://autos.yahoo.com/green_center/ ----------------- 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 iml.webmonster@xxxxxxxxx To UN-SUBSCRIBE, go to http://imperialclub.com/unsubscribe.htm