If you want it to work like it did when it was new, almost any competent repair shop can do that for you - I used to do so for friends, but I retired years ago. If you want it to work like a new one (note slight change in wording), you'll have to have it converted to modern innards, with quartz lock tuning, low noise front end, digital display, stereo audio system etc. Many of the shops you noticed in Hemming's also do this work, but it is more expensive. What's the difference, you ask? The older technology FM radios do not have the stability to lock on a station and stay there over hill and dale, they do not reject multipath distortion (Donald Duck voices when you pass buildings or mountains), and they cannot lock on extremely weak signals such as those in areas more than 100 miles from the transmitter, and they have no "capture" technology, which allows them to lock onto one station even though a signal from another station is bleeding into the same channel. The result is very unsatisfactory operation of the FM section unless you live within 50 miles of the transmitter, and never move the car. The difference for AM operation is smaller, but still annoying, because the older technology will drift off the station due to vibration or temperature effects, giving you distorted audio at times, and they are harder to tune accurately. Dick Benjamin (who used to design these critters, and now lives 120 miles from the nearest station!) ----- Original Message ----- From: <dan.donna.m@xxxxxxx> : IML: Regarding Radio's next question is regarding the radio. Does anyone know > of a good, reputable repair shop where I can send my AM/FM radio and get it > overhauled so it will work as close to new as possible?? I know there are a > lot of places listed in Hemmings and such magazines but was wondering if any > of our IML members have first-hand experience with any place in particular????? > Thanks to everyone in advance!!! > Dan Melnik / 2-66 Convertibles (Brandy & Cinderella)