Chris, Arran, Roger, Thank you all for your comments. I figured there had to be some kind of metal under there-- the visor on the '68 sticks out quite a ways. Yet, I think Arran must be onto something when he says heat probably made it that way. However, like Chris, I'm a little reluctant to try heating up my dash. (It gets pretty hot here in Florida, so I don't think I'll need a blow dryer.) I was thinking of finding some kind of small jack-- 2 of them-- and placing one under the driver's side and one under the pass. side. Then I was going to suspend or attach a 2x4 between them and slowly jack up the side that's drooping and leave it like that in the sun for awhile. But this seemed so Rube Goldbergian I decided not to do it. Has anyone taken a '68 dashpad apart? (The visor part?) Does the vinyl come apart from the metal backing? Or is it one unit with the foam poured on or around a metal core? If it's the latter I'm pretty much down to 2 choices: Rube's 2x4 solution, or leave it alone. Thank you, Mark Christopher Hoffman wrote: > Roger, Arran and mostly Mark, > > There is metal under the dash pad. It is not simply a big vinyl coated foam > pillow, and what tends to sag is the entire structure. It's a very long > unsupported span for a thin dash visor (and the visor is even more prominent > in '68 than '67), so the thing tends to just sink in the middle under its > own weight. > > I would imagine you'd need to bend the sheetmetal framework under the vinyl > pad to remove the sag. > > I would also be very leery of heating up 35-year-old vinyl... I would seem > too easy to ruin a perfectly nice looking dash pad that way, not to mention > baking the foam inside to a brittle state. > > Just my two cents... I don't have any suggestions to make it look new, but > maybe leaving well enough along might be the best course of action (or > inaction). Or maybe park the car upside down for 15-17 years and see if it > rights itself? :) Seriously, I'd ask a professional (or keep hoping for an > answer here from someone who's successfully fixed this problem in a '68) > before trying anything, since it's not something you need to fix right away. > > Chris in LA > 67 Crown > 78 NYB Salon > > A. Foster (monkeypuzzle1@xxxxxxx) wrote: > > > Roger; > > You left your cap lock on when you posted, it means that you were shouting > > in the computer world. Mark's dash problem involved a drooping piece of > > vinyl not a drooping piece of pot metal. >