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Harley PHD

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Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    N.E. Arkansas
  • My Project Cars
    1950 Dodge Coronet (had since high school)

Converted

  • Location
    N.E. Arkansas
  • Interests
    Fixing things, riding motorcycles

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  • Occupation
    Harley Davidson mechanic since 1994

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  1. I made this one in years ago from this picture. The factory one probably works better
  2. I always have trouble removing and installing the door handle. The holes never line up until I force the inner door molding in. I tried it this way, but it felt dangerous. I didn't mar or bend anything this time. 😅
  3. Could he unplug the kickdown connector and tape it up just to test? I've installed new wiring harness on new vehicles, and they were defective. Pins in wrong connectors. Could be a bad resistor or circuit breaker that fails when hot.
  4. have you looked at this old service reference book? TROUBLE-SHOOTING IN THE HYDRACLICALLY OPERATED TRANSMISSION a link to the IMPERIAL WEB PAGES Transmission and Clutch Repair Information for Imperials and Chrysler Imperials
  5. My aftermarket tank had a bubble flair fitting on it like the original steel fuel line.
  6. The small hole should be a very small hole. The brakes wont bleed with it clogged up. I've had to use a sewing needle to clean them out, be careful, you might have to hone it a little if you nick it up with the needle.
  7. brake tester harness
  8. It should be the same as my 1950 coronet. The brake light pressure switch goes to the turn signal switch first, then to rear brake lights. There are six wires coming out of the turn signal switch by the steering column, on 2 3way bullet connectors. one of them is the brake signal in. You can check there for brake signal. I made a 3way pig tail of bullet connectors and unplugged the turn side wires and wired the brake signal directly to the taillight wires under the dash. It was in the same 3way connector. this way you can test your circuit from the brake switch to the brake lights. I had to buy a NOS aftermarket turn switch on Ebay and take it apart and file the contacts flat to make it work right.
  9. Thanks, looks like trucks are easier to get seat upholstery kits for.
  10. Where did your seat upholstery come from? I've bought a headliner, but the same place didn't have a pattern for 1950 dodge seats.
  11. They were close but a little bit off. The paper that came with the clips said if they didn't match to send them back with one original clip and they would try to match them. I'm the one who l picked them out, so I modified them in my vice with a punch and hammer. some of them didn't survive, but most of them were usable. I found out if you use the rounded edge of my old vice they broke less. lower left is original clips, right is some I made out of coat hangers when I painted the car in the 1980s, upper left is the failed re-bending of the new clips.
  12. My 1950 coronet uses the same fittings as the brake lines. Its solid metal line from distributor to carburetor.
  13. I think I found one in that catalogue. The shipping cost as much at the clips. part# B1420 from Restoration Specialties, I'll tell you if it is the right part when they come in.
  14. I thought it would be easier to buy a set of them. I made some years ago, but the coat hanger wire I used rusted away. That restoration specialties catalog has to many choices, it will take me a while to go through them.
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