Re: Repairing 70 Interior Quarter Trim
If any such modification was done, it was done by the supplier; that sort of thing wasn't done at St. Louis. The part number molded into the back side of the panel was in the mold, and doesn't identify the finished part - it's like a casting number. The finished parts had their own individual part numbers (based on color and configuration), and were usually shown in the A.I.M. as "chart" rather than listing all the permutations and usages on the A.I.M. sheet.
If any such modification was done, it was done by the supplier; that sort of thing wasn't done at St. Louis. The part number molded into the back side of the panel was in the mold, and doesn't identify the finished part - it's like a casting number. The finished parts had their own individual part numbers (based on color and configuration), and were usually shown in the A.I.M. as "chart" rather than listing all the permutations and usages on the A.I.M. sheet.
I was most curious about how they identified all the different trim combinations...using broadcast codes like all the other components makes sense. So ALL the trim parts had broadcast labels on them somewhere at one time?...or, were bulk parts just packed in boxes with the broadcast code on the outside?
Comment