Finally the dash restoration is done. This was the part of the restoration that I was dreading the most...other then the bodywork. I started the dissassembly in February. I took a lot of pictures and a few notes. I sent the pad to Ultimate Rides and had them redo the original pad and send it back. I didn't deal dirrectly with them though. Dave from Roseville Chrysler handled everything and was great to work with.
The pad I got back had a lot of extra foam that needed to be trimmed. I guess this is normal with an UR pad. There were a few areas that I wasn't happy with. I tried pealing back the vinyl in one area to trim some foam but ended up ruining the pad.
I called Dave and he talked to the owner of UR. He generously agreed to fix my screwup as long as I paid the shipping both ways. I was more than willing to do that so I wouldn't have to pay for another complete pad.
About six weeks went by and I still didn't have the pad back. I called UR a few times and every time I was told the pad was done....they were just waiting on the invoice.
Finally, I'd had enough and called Dave again. Even though it was no longer his problem, he called UR to see what was going on. The next day I got a call from UR saying that the pad was shipping.
A week later the pad arrived. As soon as I opened the box, I could tell that this wasn't my original core. I had engraved my initials in the frame right below the VIN plate on the underside. If anyone sees DOB engraved in that area, you've got my original core. I was tired of messing around with the pad so I didn't press the issue. I'm sure the delay in getting the pad back was due to the fact that they sold my core to someone else. Anyway, the pad I had gotten back the first time was accually nicer then this one. I had to redrill the center speaker grill holes as well as the two VIN plate holes in order to get those parts to fit. I definately think it's nicer to get your original core back instead of someone elses. Things just fit better if you have your original one.
I shopped around to find someone to redo the gauges. They were in decent shape so I didn't think they would need a total overhall. I ended up sending them to Glen at GCAR. He refaced the gauges with overlays...originally they were screan printed but unless you look close, you can't tell the difference. He rebuild the speedometer and relettered the odometer. I didn't want the odometer set to 0 so he kept the miliage the same. The original tach was pretty close to accurate so he just calibrated it. The oil pressure, fuel level, temp and Alt gauges were all in great shape. The clock was converted to a Quartz mechanism.