Wild R/T made a comment on a different post about how I was doing things the hard way. This story is only going to reinforce that point.
If you're considering replacing your dash pad, this is the punchline: TEST FIT YOUR NEW DASH PAD ON THE FRAME RIGHT AWAY!
The dashpad was my first major part purchase, made about 4 years ago. A couple of months ago, I finally test fit the dash pad on the lower metal frame, which led to a couple of serious Oh Crap moments. There was a crescent shaped gap between the pad and the frame on the passenger side edge, likely caused by some corrosion disappearing part of the pad support before it was recovered. It looked terrible. The other joy was that the stock side speaker covers I had purchased for this 3 speaker dash didn't fit the profile of the new dash at all - there was a gap ranging from 1/4" to 1/2" along one side.
There was too much time elapsed since the purchase of the pad to do anything with the vendor. I ended up talking with Jon at Roseville who suggested someone he knew that repaired dashes. In order to make sure the repairs were done right, I needed to send the lower frame along with the dash pad. I ended up building a wooden shipping crate to protect everything, which of course made for a heavier shipment. A local UPS office handled the shipment to the repair dude who lived near Detroit. Since they could inspect the packaging, they were willing to insure the package.
The repairs went great. The speaker grills were heated and reshaped to fit the dash. The "only" issue was the return shipment. UPS was glad to pick up the crate, but wouldn't insure it because they didn't inspect the packaging in one of their offices. After finding no other alternatives, I ended up spending this past Sunday driving from Buffalo to Detroit and back through Canada (about 5 hours each way). I could add the "blinding snowstorm" on the way there but it's pretty normal for Buffalo so no big deal. Having the crate in the bed of my Ram certainly made for an interesting border crossing given that it looked like a small coffin. When I told the customs agent the box had a dashboard for a 70 Dodge Challenger, there was a "what?" reply from him, a repeat of the answer from me, then from him a smile and wave on back to the U.S. I think it was one of those "nope - couldn't make that one up if he tried" situations.
Although it was a long day, I was glad to know exactly how the dash pad was handled on the return trip. I add some photos in a later post - I don't want to mess with the reopening the packaging until I'm ready to put it all back together.
I don't want to post the repair guy's phone on the internet. If you're looking for dash repair help in the Detroit area, call Jon @ Roseville and ask him for Larry's contact info.
So you're right Wild R/T, I'm (still) doing it the hard way.