I would just restore it like from the factory.
Who in their right mind would want to remove those cool guages that come
from the factory?
It would be interesting to see if you could make the hood scoupe (I think
there is a small one on the hood already) without changing the apperance
from outside the car. :)
Dan
Not even power windows?!
I guess I would go to a parts yard and get the factory original options I
wanted (done that to my Cuda).
>
>>Who in their right mind would want to remove those cool guages that come
>>from the factory?
>
>Those cool gauges are little more than idiot lights. I can retain some
>of the look by inserting real informative gauges in the stock pods.
>
Boy! your car must be the stripped down model!
I dont ever remember seeing lights in those Tbirds.
That hood scoupe should work out good I would think. :)
Dan
That was an era when Ford was offering a lot of mix-and-match options.
Thunderbirds of that generation could be ordered with all the buttons or
almost none or anything in between. As a veteran of epic struggles with
Thunderbird power window mechanisms and the associated electrical system,
I can sympathize with the desire for manual ones! As for AC, somebody on
the vintage-T-bird list stated that only about one in four had factory
air. Not until sometime in the late 60s or early 70s, even on luxury
models, did it become the near-ubiquitous accessory that it is today.
> >Those cool gauges are little more than idiot lights. I can retain some
> >of the look by inserting real informative gauges in the stock pods.
> Boy! your car must be the stripped down model!
> I dont ever remember seeing lights in those Tbirds.
Well, he said "*little more than* idiot lights." The gauges in my '66
aren't really calibrated or marked in great detail. However, I've never
really cared whether my oil pressure is 38 psi or 35; all I care about is
whether the needle is (a) comfortably high and (b) in about the same
place as it was a year or two ago.
> That hood scoupe should work out good I would think. :)
Alas, it's a false scoop, just there for sporty appearance. Air comes in
through a spout in the air cleaner housing, at the ambient temperature
underhood.
Anyway. If you're restoring, customizing, driving around in, or just
considering a Thunderbird, have a look at the Cyber Nest:
http://www.tbird.org/tcn.shtml
Cheers,
--Joe
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In article <37defb7b....@news.thegrid.net>, JimMcClain "at" TheGrid
"dot" net wrote:
> On 14 Sep 1999 04:49:48 PDT, "DB" <gala...@concentric.net> wrote:
>
> >>>Who in their right mind would want to remove those cool guages that come
> >>>from the factory?
> >>
> >>Those cool gauges are little more than idiot lights. I can retain some
> >>of the look by inserting real informative gauges in the stock pods.
> >>
> >Boy! your car must be the stripped down model!
> >I dont ever remember seeing lights in those Tbirds.
>
> Hi Dan,
>
> Sorry for the misunderstanding. "Little more than..." means just a
> little more than or just a little better than, in this case, idiot
> lights -- they aren't idiot lights, they're just one small step up
> from idiot lights. The gas gauge is very inaccurate, the temp gauge
> gives no temperature, the amp gauge and oil pressure gauge don't give
> detailed information at all. There are some gauges that might be
> advantageous along with better versions of the above and can be
> combined in one dial face so I can have good gauges measuring a bigger
> variety of systems all in the original T-Bird instrument pods.
>
> I will have to find a place for a tach though.