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Since the El Camino is drivable and the engine had been running a little
rough, before we replaced the charging system and installed the air cleaner
it was decided that a quick test lap out in front of the garage was called
for and that Weckman would be the wheelman.
Bill fired up the big block, rolled the Camino out in
front of the shop, applied a little brake and then floored it. The Camino
moved hard, leaving two distinct black tracks and tire smoke behind
it. Bill stayed on the pedal until the turbo 400 shifted to second,
producing an audible chirp from the tires. We can't wait to try this
with the 3:73 gears. Bill quickly turned the car around and drove back
into the garage. We closed the doors, and turned out the lights. Someone
suggested we test the nitrous purge again. Fortunately the bottle was
empty.
After the test the trans sprung a small leak and is going
back to the trans shop for a little tune-up.
One of the jobs that we couldn't scam was replacing the
30 plus-year-old interior that had obviously seen duty as the liner
for a chicken coop. So, with much grumbling, I paid a pro to do the
job. Unfortunately the upholstery guy, who got paid in advance, is still
not quite finished with the job after over a year of working on it.
So in the mean time we've installed the new rubber and felt we got from
Gary Anderson's SoffsSeal Co. on the windows and doors.
While working on the interior we discovered that the controls
for the heater-defroster were inop. Upon removing the whole assembly
from the dash we found that the cables were all frozen up with rust
and that some goon had broken one of the control levers trying to move
it. We're working on repairing that unit instead of replacing it because
after calling several of the resto house and being told that there are
no new or repro parts available to replace it we seemed to have no choice.
If any of you out there can offer help in that area we would appreciate
it.
Also, some El Camino experts have told us that the car
is an original big block car because of the numbers on the VIN tag and
the factory posi. The Camino also has a bench seat and a column-shifted
turbo 400, which another El Camino expert told us he had never seen
before. Anybody out there got info about this or how to research it?
Oh by the way, the DRO El Camino gang has adopted its
own version of NHRA's 90% rule. Ours works like this: if the temperature,
humidity or heat factor get over the 90 degree or 90 percent mark in
the St. Louis area, we have to stop working and check into O'Connells
for re-hydration. It's July in St. Louis, call us at O'Connell's.
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