2 years of waiting...finally checked this off my to do list😀

Allan- does "t/s lever" not mean turn signal lever in the Great White North? I could see the correct tilt actuator lever in background.
'Course if he had a Chevy tilt actuator the Chevy guys would be wetting their britches!🤑
'Course if he had a Chevy tilt actuator the Chevy guys would be wetting their britches!🤑
Differences in marketing and expectations. Olds buyers expected a little more glitz and glamour for the price difference between Olds and Chevy.
Olds liked chrome levers. Chevy liked matching the **** color to the interior color. Buick for years color-keyed their pedals to interior color. Part of their brand identities and all looked nice.
Olds liked chrome levers. Chevy liked matching the **** color to the interior color. Buick for years color-keyed their pedals to interior color. Part of their brand identities and all looked nice.
Differences in marketing and expectations. Olds buyers expected a little more glitz and glamour for the price difference between Olds and Chevy.
Olds liked chrome levers. Chevy liked matching the **** color to the interior color. Buick for years color-keyed their pedals to interior color. Part of their brand identities and all looked nice.
Olds liked chrome levers. Chevy liked matching the **** color to the interior color. Buick for years color-keyed their pedals to interior color. Part of their brand identities and all looked nice.
Does the chrome tip also act as a 'plunger'? If it does you could have a stalk that is for either cruise control or pulse wiper activation (like the 1970 Olds did)
Take a pic of the END of your turn signal lever. I have zoomed the other pics as large as I can and I can't see any chrome on that plastic ****. Looks all black to me which, with the overall design, is characteristic of a 1967 Chevrolet part.
The tilt lever, I can see the chromed end on that. But I have explained as best I can why different GM carlines had different interior appointments. GM then was a lot different than GM now. Their post-1988 insistence on "corporate" appearance cues instead of "divisional" was driven by one thing. Cost.
And car buyers quickly wised up to the fact that even a Cadillac was often nothing but a Chevrolet in drag, which is why Olds and Pontiac lost so much market share they were axed. The "experts" with their newly minted MBAs said GM had too many brands. What GM really had was too many brands that were all the same behind whatever emblem was on the grille.
I found it hilarious that the people who created all that came from a detergent conglomerate, where it was simple to put the same detergent formula in different brand packaging. The only difference was the scent. "HEY, WE CAN DO THAT WITH CARS TOO!"
Pfft.
The tilt lever, I can see the chromed end on that. But I have explained as best I can why different GM carlines had different interior appointments. GM then was a lot different than GM now. Their post-1988 insistence on "corporate" appearance cues instead of "divisional" was driven by one thing. Cost.
And car buyers quickly wised up to the fact that even a Cadillac was often nothing but a Chevrolet in drag, which is why Olds and Pontiac lost so much market share they were axed. The "experts" with their newly minted MBAs said GM had too many brands. What GM really had was too many brands that were all the same behind whatever emblem was on the grille.
I found it hilarious that the people who created all that came from a detergent conglomerate, where it was simple to put the same detergent formula in different brand packaging. The only difference was the scent. "HEY, WE CAN DO THAT WITH CARS TOO!"
Pfft.
That looks absolutely perfect Dave. Well done. Now your column, wheel and levers are spot on!
I notice you have a tilt wheel. Any issues changing that turn switch with that feature?
I notice you have a tilt wheel. Any issues changing that turn switch with that feature?
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