PNWMach1
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2020
- Messages
- 101
- Reaction score
- 65
- Location
- Perrysburg, OH
- My Car
- 1973 Mach 1 H-code
What a stunner! Welcome from Ohio!
Your interior looks good, my interior is still stripped down and waiting on me to get it back together. Why are you frustrated with your interior?Harrison, Idaho here. working on interior this week, and getting frustrated.View attachment 76147
the frustrating part is the shoddy craftsmanship back in the 70's. some of my interior trim pieces dont fit very well. big gaps, etc. i am not going to modify them. i am going for concourse original. even if it doesnt look right. i am also having a tough time locating a few key parts. plastic trim piece that goes on front of my dash pad. only early 71' had them. cant seem to find an original, or repop rear package tray. only better than factory ones. made of abs or pvc. i dont really want better. i want original. it seems to me that going concourse is harder than custom. because i have set strict guidelines for myself to follow. another tough item is the divider board that goes behind the back seat. separating the back seat from the trunk. i think that it is simply a "curtain" of foam padding, or cardboard/fiberboard material. not really sure what i am looking for. i did have good luck with the carpet and seats. the center console is turning out great. as soon as i am confident that all my hard to get to wires, heater controls, and vents are good to go. i will put the dash back together. i dont look forward to hanging my doors and installing all of the window and door mechanisms. however, i am good with this sort of thing and will get it done.Your interior looks good, my interior is still stripped down and waiting on me to get it back together. Why are you frustrated with your interior?
I can understand this! I'd be frustrated too if I were constrained to the mediocre quality of the original product, especially knowing I could make it better.the frustrating part is the shoddy craftsmanship back in the 70's. some of my interior trim pieces dont fit very well. big gaps, etc. i am not going to modify them. i am going for concourse original. even if it doesnt look right. i am also having a tough time locating a few key parts. plastic trim piece that goes on front of my dash pad. only early 71' had them. cant seem to find an original, or repop rear package tray. only better than factory ones. made of abs or pvc. i dont really want better. i want original. it seems to me that going concourse is harder than custom. because i have set strict guidelines for myself to follow. another tough item is the divider board that goes behind the back seat. separating the back seat from the trunk. i think that it is simply a "curtain" of foam padding, or cardboard/fiberboard material. not really sure what i am looking for. i did have good luck with the carpet and seats. the center console is turning out great. as soon as i am confident that all my hard to get to wires, heater controls, and vents are good to go. i will put the dash back together. i dont look forward to hanging my doors and installing all of the window and door mechanisms. however, i am good with this sort of thing and will get it done.
the frustrating part is the shoddy craftsmanship back in the 70's. some of my interior trim pieces dont fit very well. big gaps, etc. i am not going to modify them. i am going for concourse original. even if it doesnt look right. i am also having a tough time locating a few key parts. plastic trim piece that goes on front of my dash pad. only early 71' had them. cant seem to find an original, or repop rear package tray. only better than factory ones. made of abs or pvc. i dont really want better. i want original. it seems to me that going concourse is harder than custom. because i have set strict guidelines for myself to follow. another tough item is the divider board that goes behind the back seat. separating the back seat from the trunk. i think that it is simply a "curtain" of foam padding, or cardboard/fiberboard material. not really sure what i am looking for. i did have good luck with the carpet and seats. the center console is turning out great. as soon as i am confident that all my hard to get to wires, heater controls, and vents are good to go. i will put the dash back together. i dont look forward to hanging my doors and installing all of the window and door mechanisms. however, i am good with this sort of thing and will get it done.
Yep. Most car loans back then were 24-36 months.3 years or 36,000 Miles. The idea was to make you happy enough to buy another after 5 years or so. Ford never intended for these things to be on the road in the 21st century. Thanks to BIC (Lighter, Pen, etc) Planned Obsolescence was finally perfected in the 80s.
I remember back in the 60s and 70s a car with 60,000 miles on it was often considered to be all used up, maybe good as an outdated transportation-only car. By the time it hit 100,000 miles it was ready for the crusher. Then, slowly began to change with planned obsolescence on the one hand for really inexpensive, economy cars (Vega, Pinto, Yugo), and then later I noticed a swing was made to producing longer lasting vehicles provided an owner took good care of their vehicle. It seems manufacturers realized one way to encourage a customer to trade up into a new vehicle was to take measures to help ensure their used car had enough value to help make it worth trading in for a new car. Also, manufacturers were getting deeper into leasing in the 80s, and the vehicles had to have some worthwhile residual value at the end of a lease to help keep leasing expenses low. Even the US and state governments got into the longevity-by-design act by requiring emission control equipment be warranted for some rather long time and mileage terms. Now it is not unusual to see a vehicle go through the hands of three or more owners before it ends up looking like it is finally time for the scrap yard. So, if it is looking like cars are lasting longer than before, it is not just a passing illusion. But, it still takes maintenance, and for repair shops it takes some pretty costly equipment to keep up with current technologies. If manufactures felt making cars last longer might have somehow hurt them this never would have happened.3 years or 36,000 Miles. The idea was to make you happy enough to buy another after 5 years or so. Ford never intended for these things to be on the road in the 21st century. Thanks to BIC (Lighter, Pen, etc) Planned Obsolescence was finally perfected in the 80s.
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