Hello Chapter, I had a question on the mounting holes for the front fender side trim. From the pictures I've researched, it appears I'm missing 5 holes. Are these different from the coupe and the sedan? Or could it be that these holes were shaved at some point? Fender doesn't appear to be the original.
Side note - I'm unable to reference opposite side as the car is not near me.
Thanks
Tags:
Hi Mark,
Albeit I have a 1964 - Series 62, I just replaced this exact molding last year. From memory, there were four spring type clips that slide on to the molding and then the clip bolts go through the fender holes that are already there. As you go to the front of the molding nearer to the front bumper, there are five small self threaded screws that go into sliding clips - they are screwed in vertically upside down, so to speak. As I set the molding to the fender, I masking taped the molding to the car as I tightened all the screws, so the molding would not bend as I opened/closed the door to access the four rear nuts to tighten. For the four rear nuts, two can be reached by simply removing the inside metal separator in the door to expose the inside of the fender. The other one can be removed by leaning over the fender and loosening it - it's under the heater motor. Finally, the last one can be seen under the fender wheel well. Hope this helps!
Dennis DiBari
Hi Mark,
You will have to drill the holes as you said. Just make sure to drill the holes so that you can access the bolts/nuts to tighten each of them on the inside of the fender. Sketch it all out first if you can, and make sue it is as level as possible for the fit into the front near the bumper. Start with the rear of the molding near the door opening. Open the door and remove that inside panel (2 small screws) to see the inside of the fender. Good place to start. Let me know how it goes.
Dennis DiBari
Started by Patrick Westphal in For Sale. Last reply by Jason Edge 12 hours ago. 1 Reply 0 Likes
Hey everyone,I have a set of front bumpers, both ends and the center section, that I am looking to sell. If you are looking for these contact me and we will talk about it. …Continue
Started by Norman Silverman in 1963/64 Cadillac Specific Discussion. Last reply by Norman Silverman yesterday. 5 Replies 0 Likes
Hello AllI am thinking about replacing the shocks on my 64 SDV. I want to do so with units that are closest to what was originally in the car in so far as ride quality. I believe these were gas…Continue
Started by Jason Edge in 1963/64 Cadillac Specific Discussion. Last reply by Dennis P. DiBari yesterday. 1 Reply 0 Likes
Last night I was installing the freshly cad plated inner fender to frame rear support brace rods and remembered how this has been often missing on the many parts cars I have brought in. The thing is…Continue
Started by Michael Monson in 1963/64 Cadillac Specific Discussion. Last reply by Jason Edge yesterday. 2 Replies 0 Likes
I'm currently rounding up parts for a heater core replacement in my 1964 Deville. I'm looking for replacement hoses that connect to the heater core itself. It's a factory a/c car and has the metal…Continue
Posted by SK on June 2, 2025 at 2:20pm 2 Comments 0 Likes
Could someone post front and back photos of the 1963 right-hand kick panel with A/C?
My car didn’t come with the original kick panels, so it's a bit of a mystery to me how I should cut the backing board and carpet to fit around the A/C.
Many thanks,
-Samu
Posted by Chase on March 12, 2025 at 2:05pm 14 Comments 1 Like
Hey guys,
I have installed the same Edelbrock carb and have done everything the same as Jason’s carb and intake project. In the spring and summer months the car starts, runs and idles great! In the fall and winter months on a cold start, the car starts awful and wants to die until it warms up. I have to keep my foot on the throttle until it warms up or it will idle just terrible and try to die. Once it’s warm, it runs fantastic! Whats going on here? I was thinking of removing the…
ContinuePosted by Ray Schick on August 22, 2024 at 6:25pm 2 Comments 0 Likes
I bought this seat material thinking that it’s…
© 2025 Created by Jason Edge.
Powered by