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Looks like you put 15 coats of wax on her. Nice!The Plodge in action, captured the other day by a local street photographer --
I am not giving the Vulcan Salute.
Looks like you put 15 coats of wax on her. Nice!The Plodge in action, captured the other day by a local street photographer --
I am not giving the Vulcan Salute.
The Plodge in action, captured the other day by a local street photographer --
I am not giving the Vulcan Salute.
I'm glad you are finally getting to drive the Plodge. OK the front end needs work, this must be getting monotonous.
At least, parts are available and with the front end done over, a good alignment job, and a set of new shock absorbers you will think you are driving a new car, no kidding. I know guys who had this done on old cars and it transformed the driving experience.
Posted this in another thread but figured it was worth a cross post.
Just picked up a 39 Dodge Luxury Liner Deluxe. Original except tires and breaks. Drives like a charm. Bumpers are off right now for rechroming
Gas ration sticker I added
Posted this in another thread but figured it was worth a cross post.
Just picked up a 39 Dodge Luxury Liner Deluxe. Original except tires and breaks. Drives like a charm. Bumpers are off right now for rechroming
Gas ration sticker I added
The Plodge in action, captured the other day by a local street photographer --
I am not giving the Vulcan Salute.
The Plodge in action, captured the other day by a local street photographer --
I am not giving the Vulcan Salute.
Sometimes the strangest things happen ...
My old '48 Plymouth has had a leaking rear wheel brake cylinder for as long as I've had the car. It doesn't leak enough that it has to be fixed right away, but enough that it will need to be one day (way too many other "projects" ahead of this). I'll occasionally add a little brake fluid, but never more than just a little bit to "top off" the master cylinder. The brake pedal has always been a bit "soft", but always stopped the car like it should.
Well, today I get in the car to drive to the Post Office and, what do you know, the brake pedal is nice and "stiff", just like it should be. I can't tell any difference in the way the car stops now with a "stiff" pedal or before with a "soft" pedal.
Also, and I know the two are not related, the fuel gage now works. It never worked before, but now it is registering. Go figure.
Anyone have any thoughts?
I am after you than. I have a few things that need to be fixed and I will even supply them with the parts.The Cobbler's elves have branched out into auto repair. Feel free to send them my way when you are finished with them.
I love the early P-38 fins better then the latter giant 59 fins!