In sum, I thought the article was pretty fair to our marque. I have read countless articles in car magazines, both contemporary to the era in which a particular Chrysler car was introduced, and also those of a contemporary "collector" nature; almost always, the superior handling of Chrysler products is brought up. So I don't think Chrysler in general, or Imperial in particular, is getting routinely "jobbed" or unappreciated by these various writers. Imperial chose to play in the same arena as the big boys, Lincoln and Cadillac, and this is how they should be judged. They came up short in the sales department; way short, usually, except for '57, when Lincoln slipped behind Imperial for that year. The reasons have to be analyzed, pure and simple. Build quality, especially fits and finishes, were behind the other two in the '60s, and way, way behind Mercedes, which was starting to develop a following. The difference between build quality for a Chevy vs Cadillac was a lot greater than Plymouth vs. Imperial. By '69, when the full size Plymouth and Imperial (and everything else in between) had the same C body, product differentiation became a real headache. Wheelbase differences can only do so much. Consumer Reports (not my favorite car mag, so no flames, please) was especially sensitive to this. I'm going to say something a little provocative now, and I say this as a proud owner of a '53 Imperial, and also as a former employee of Chrysler (Defense, tanks): Chrysler had over a half century to establish the Imperial as a successful marque in terms of sales and customer acceptance. They failed. The '67 and '68s came, in baseball parlance, around the 7th inning or so if this process. Hence the non-cheerleading tone of the CA piece...The writer otherwise would be remiss in ignoring reality. In contrast, Lexus became a successful luxury marque in 3 years, maybe less...In fact, the term rapidly became a part of the lexicon, as in, "The Lexus of this, The Lexus of that", meaning, well, whatever is being referred to is really something special. I never heard "Imperial" used in this manner, sad to say. And there's a reason. Currell (hoping there will be yet another Imperial some day, Mercedes be damned! Maybe they can get it right this time. Where is Lutz when we really need him)? _________________________________________________________________ Join the world’s largest e-mail service with MSN Hotmail. http://www.hotmail.com