<VV> Corvair A/C Question
William Hubbell
whubbell at verizon.net
Tue Dec 14 17:38:16 EST 2010
It may not always be possible to determine what was "factory original" vs.
dealer or aftermarket, but it sure is fun to try! I think the problems
arise when some folks start forgetting that this is SUPPOSED to be fun and
start getting all anal about it.
Bill Hubbell
President, Stock Corvair Group.
-----Original Message-----
From: virtualvairs-bounces at corvair.org
[mailto:virtualvairs-bounces at corvair.org] On Behalf Of Eric S. Eberhard
Sent: Tuesday, December 14, 2010 4:37 PM
To: BBRT
Cc: virtualvairs at corvair.org
Subject: Re: <VV> Corvair A/C Question
Depends on the year and model and factory ... Jeeps were completely
coated in something called cosmoline, plastic was likely around the
seats despite driving them off, and dealer prep usually included
removing a bunch of things from the cars that were there for shipping
(or not there). Most certainly did not have radials. Almost 100% of
all cars and at least ONE dealer option -- as this was the common way
to do options then. I bet people now prefer modern oil and
grease. And where exactly would you get that leaded gasoline that
they used to drive them off the truck? Paper mats on the
floor? Paint that contained lead in it? Where exactly do you find
that these days?
I was not trying to be specific about what was or was not on a
Corvair from each and every factory and model and year -- I was
pointing out that there is actually no such thing as a car just like
it was from the factory. I was making a point, and used generic
examples. I am sure others can find all kinds of other ones. In
fact one could be silly -- does your factory car have exactly the
same amount of gas in the tank as it left the factory (or do they put
that in outside the factory, and how does that then count? -- in
other words, it came out of the factory w/out gassed, and they were
gassed for shipment -- that is what I heard -- of course it may have
been on the property of the factory and not in the building so some
would say the gasoline is factory and some would not). Another point
I am making in case I am being too subtle is that this whole subject
gets VERY silly at times.
One that really grinds me are the people that over-restore to the
point that the body panels line up as if done in a modern factory
using laser equipment. I doubt many Corvairs ever had panel
alignment like that! Also, they use base coat/clear coat and make
the paint so much nicer than factory. And powder coat all kinds of
things that were never powder coated. Pretty in their own way, just
not "factory" despite them entering them in competitions as factory.
So -- just enjoy your car. If something is not factory or you are
not sure, does it really change how your car drives and handles? I
rescued a gelding Thoroughbred race horse ... and for $600.00 I could
get the genuine Jockey Club certified papers ... but I suspect he
rides just the same without them :-) so I never bothered.
E
At 01:16 PM 12/14/2010, you wrote:
>Eric,
>
>They weren't wrapped in plastic and did have oil and gasoline..ever
>see them drive off the truck bringing them to the dealer? No goopy
>stuff, either.
>
>Chuck S
>----- Original Message ----- From: "Eric S. Eberhard" <flash at vicsmba.com>
>To: <virtualvairs at corvair.org>; <virtualvairs at corvair.org>
>Cc: <Sethracer at aol.com>
>Sent: Tuesday, December 14, 2010 2:51 PM
>Subject: <VV> Corvair A/C Question
>
>
>>Trying to unequivocally state what came from the factory and exactly
>>how everything was is a futile exercise. There were variations
>>between factories, workers, dealers, and customers. I have a 62 A/C
>>Coupe originally sold in Bakersfield, CA. I have the original
>>customer's invoice/sticker in terrible shape ... which specifies
>>non-tinted windows. So not all A/C cars had tinted windows. You can
>>never tell customer taste and I have no idea how the dealer achieved
>>it. Perhaps the dealer changed the windows or added the A/C, but A/C
>>is listed in the factory option section, the non-tinted windows
>>listed in the car description. But, I bet the dealer made this
>>document so who knows (or cares) -- my car certainly was sold from
>>the dealer with A/C.
>>
>>Just for the record nobody has (or wants) a car just like it left the
>>factory. Forget about bias ply tires, points, etc -- from the
>>factory it was wrapped in plastic, had no gas, no oil, had goopy
>>stuff to protect it ... it would seem a more correct standard would
>>be to restore a car to how it left the dealer with some wriggle room
>>for safety. That is what I do anyway.
>>
>>I had a 74 BMW 3.0 CSL that was equipped in a way that everyone said
>>was not correct. This caused me trouble trying to sell it. Then a
>>kind person sent me a period magazine article. It showed pictures of
>>their test car equipped exactly like mine -- to a "T" -- and in the
>>article the explained that their's was an "export" version and hence
>>was equipped with variations from the home market version. And my
>>car was correct despite 25 experts that said otherwise!
>>
>>E
>>
>>
>>
>>At 06:45 PM 12/13/2010, virtualvairs-request at corvair.org wrote:
>>>Message: 2
>>>Date: Mon, 13 Dec 2010 16:37:34 EST
>>>From: Sethracer at aol.com
>>>Subject: Re: <VV> Corvair A/C Question
>>>To: brent.fullard at rogers.com, virtualvairs at corvair.org
>>>Message-ID: <3a579.43d33709.3a37ec1e at aol.com>
>>>Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
>>>
>>>
>>>In a message dated 12/13/2010 12:36:44 P.M. Pacific Standard Time,
>>>brent.fullard at rogers.com writes:
>>>
>>>Re: " The factory cut the openings with a cutting torch "
>>>
>>>Are you sure about that? This picture from Kent Sullivan's website of a
>>>donor car with factory A/C sure doesn't look like torch cut openings to
me,
>>>and more like stamped openings:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>The factory was working with an empty car body - no interior installed.
>>>Cutting it with a torch was easy and quick. The dealer had to work within
a
>>>complete car, carpeting - at least some, wiring, and a painted
>>>dash panel. He
>>> could not use a torch. Unless you bought the car new, and watched it
come
>>>off the truck, it is hard to tell the difference between a proper dealer
>>>installed A/C and the factory. (That is providing that the other common
>>>options like tinted glass are installed.)
>>>
>>>- Seth Emerson
>>
>>
>>Eric S. Eberhard
>>(928) 567-3727 Voice
>>(928) 567-6122 Fax
>>(928) 301-7537 Cell
>>
>>Vertical Integrated Computer Systems, LLC
>>Metropolis Support, LLC
>>
>>For Metropolis support and VICS MBA Support!!!! http://www.vicsmba.com
>>
>>Fun personal pictures: Includes horses, dogs, Corvairs, and
>>more. http://www.vicsmba.com/ourpics/index.html
>>
>>However, most new pictures are on Facebook.
>>
>>
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Eric S. Eberhard
(928) 567-3727 Voice
(928) 567-6122 Fax
(928) 301-7537 Cell
Vertical Integrated Computer Systems, LLC
Metropolis Support, LLC
For Metropolis support and VICS MBA Support!!!! http://www.vicsmba.com
Fun personal pictures: Includes horses, dogs, Corvairs, and
more. http://www.vicsmba.com/ourpics/index.html
However, most new pictures are on Facebook.
_______________________________________________
This message was sent by the VirtualVairs mailing list, all copyrights are
the property
of the writer, please attribute properly. For help,
mailto:vv-help at corvair.org
This list sponsored by the Corvair Society of America,
http://www.corvair.org/
Post messages to: VirtualVairs at corvair.org
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