In order of relevance: 1. Covers every year that the Imperial was made by Chrysler, showing as much information as has been found/donated over the last decade. Unlike any other resource online for old cars that I'm aware of for breadth ans scope, but I would love to be proven wrong. Allpar.com is a strong contender, although heavy on text and much wider on focus - one must mine deeper to get to the many real nuggets there, in my opinion. 2. Site Contains Many hidden gems that defy casual skimming to be found. One must open pages and read the text, contrary to the custom in our 1000 page-per-hour online image-skimming-world. This stuff was in print orginally, when there was more time and visual information attention spans had not shrivelled to mere seconds. The viewer must explore to find them - I will list a few at the bottom, but if you're not looking outside your specific area of interest and bothering to READ, you're REALLY missing some good stuff. 3. Free page(s) for your car, photos of it, and it's story. My 1960 epic is 19 pages, so you're encouraged to write your car's story. You're also encouraged to wash your car and take it someplace more scenic than your driveway (I went to the golden gate bridge for one, and the bay bridge here in SF for another), but it's your deal. The CONTACT US buttons all over the website will yeild an email address so that you can send your stuff in and/or update it any time. Here are a few good examples: http://imperialclub.com/Yr/1960/60Burgess/Page01.htm http://imperialclub.com/Yr/1960/LukeNola/index.htm http://imperialclub.com/Yr/1960/HenryHopkins/index.htm 4. PARTS. Need a part? Push this button and get instant access to every parts vendor and wrecking yard known that might have Imperial parts. Sorted by type. BUT WAIT - THERE'S MORE - we even offer reviews and a comment section so that you can see who's on the ball and who's maybe not all that hot to deal with. This area is something like 4-5 clicks in, and people just don't always seem to make it past click number 3. A shame, really, since it really answers almost any question that starts with "who has" or "where can I" that revolves around parts. 5. REPAIR. Now that you have your PART, you want to put it in? Click this button for an awesome amalgamation of almost everything we have ever discussed here on the IML. Really. Click on Wheels and see what comes up, for example - how much could we possibly have about wheels? Silly metal things...Right? If you have not seen this, it is the Death Star of how-to information. Really. 6. ARCHIVE SEARCH. Duh, which way did it go? The site is giant. Use the "Google" feature and search only our site. Creative use of key words will sometimes turn up unusually helpful artifacts. You may be surprised! 7. IMPERIAL HIGHWAY (located on the MAILING LIST page). Lists people by map that want to be found and contacted. Great way to contact local people for borrowing tools or couch-surfing or whatever it is that you might want to do after contacting someone. If you're on, maybe now is a good time to check that your email is correct, and if you're not, maybe it's time to consider getting added? It's FREE. 8. IMPERIAL REGISTRY. Also on MAILING LIST as well as each yearly page. How many imperials are left? The 50 DMV's certainly aren't telling, and don't count the cars that are not registered anyway. Good place to insert some info about your car. 9. LITERATURE. Powerful button, this one. Over 300 period articles, some very insightful with specs and road tests and so forth. Also part numbers as well as service literature that is reference-grade and can be printed to take under the car or passed to your mechanic so he can take it under the car. Nothing beats a highlighted passage or red arrows to refer to when doing the Deed. 10. Those oval buttons at the bottom. Been into ODDITIES or WHATS NEW? And hey! Isn't that a redundant REGISTRY button down there? We think the registry is pretty important, although some folks are cranky about putting their vin numbers in, but we don't share that, and really already have all the cars we will ever personally need, so it's a pretty safe place with only one or two people on the planet even able to access that sort of hidden info, so come on in, it's safe. So there's my 4 minute tour of the website. My top picks for places that the "normal" person might not ever find without being pointed to them? 1. Where the Chrysler PentaStar came from (long read, but worthwhile, I think): http://imperialclub.com/Articles/Identity/index.htm 2. Ghia - Coachbuilder to the World: http://imperialclub.com/Articles/87Ghia/index.htm 3. How the HiWay HiFi Under-Dash Record Player was invented: http://imperialclub.com/Repair/Accessories/HiWay/invent.htm 4. Building the ultimate Imperial Drag car: http://imperialclub.com/Articles/EBerg/index.htm 5. Trifon Special: Birth of the Airflow: http://imperialclub.com/Articles/Trifon/index.htm 6. WAR YEARS - What Chrysler was up to 1941-45. See "A Job Thought Impossible" - fascinating! http://imperialclub.com/Yr/1945/index.htm 7. REPAIR/Wheels & Tires/Wheel Cover ID - pictures of every wheel treatment ever offered: http://imperialclub.com/Repair/Wheels/covers.htm 8. Electronic Marvel Brochure: 1981-83 sort of gets shorted in the talk about 1950's/1960's cars, but try reading the print on this and think about how incredible the car was at that time - NOBODY else was doing this stuff, but they sure are now! http://imperialclub.com/Yr/1981/Literature/ElectronicMarvel/index.htm 9. Painting 101, by Kerry Pinkerton (hint: perform an archive search on this name for other brilliantly executed stories on 1973, 1950, and 1957 cars): http://www.imperialclub.com/Repair/Body/Painting101/ 10. As far as I'm concerned, this is the crown jewel for people who like fins. Reading required - the pictures aren't enough: http://www.imperialclub.com/Articles/57Styling/index.htm __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com ----------------- 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