Re: IML: dealership attitudes to Imperials back in the day
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Re: IML: dealership attitudes to Imperials back in the day



The part aboiut the difficulty in working on these cars struck a chord with me. My dad
took a 59' Imperial 2HT in midnight blue in trade for a valve job back around 1977.  I was
enamored with the car even though they were considered ridiculously flamboyant at the time.  A few years later, as it sat in the field (still in fairly good shape at that point), I would make trips out to work on it and attempt to resurect it back onto the highway.  It was an incredibly difficult car to work on under the dash and the electro-mechanical gremlins that accompanied such things. 
I conveniently forgot that part several years ago when I started
to look for another 57-59 Imperial.  Having one in the garage now, I have to say that they can be a real pain w/ some of the oddball-complex stuff that doesn't interchange to other mopar.
Not to mention the brakes and of course working under the dash again.  Not easy for someone who is 6'10".  

"Hugh, 58 Imperial" <imperial58@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
While I briefly sold new MOPARS a few years ago, I was working with a
semi-retired former dealership owner whose establishment was in Karnes City,
Texas, the county seat of Karnes County, a rural and none too affluent part
of the state maybe half way between San Antonio and Corpus Christi. His
business dealt mainly with Plymouths. It is important to note that Chrysler
Corp. never had a separate Imperial distribution chain. Imperials were
tacked onto existing dealerships. The guy who started this thread actually
enlightened me as to who sold Imperials in San Antonio as I could not find
that out going through old business directories and stuff like that. Often
there was some arm twisting involved in getting a dealer to carry, and
therefore service, Imperials.

My friend from Karnes City refused to carry the name plate for a number of
very good business reasons. He mainly sold Plymouths. A Plymouth buyer
knew he was at the low end of the spectrum and his or her demands were
relatively manageable. An Imperial buyer was a different breed altogether.
Much fussier and more particular about every aspect of the car. It took far
more time and effort to sell an Imperial than it did to get a Plymouth off
the lot. I went through this myself with the Dodge Viper. In my seven
months at possibly the worst job I ever had in my life, I could sell new
Dodge Ram pick ups all day with little hassle. I finally managed to unload
the dealer's one and only Viper, but it took months and months. Loads of
rotten test drives involving way too much testosterone and far too little
actual skill but that's a different story. The second reason why selling
Imperials was bad deal was servicing them. He would have to send his
mechanics for additional training, at his own expense, plus carry a whole
different set of parts in his already crammed service area.

So, even back then, dealerships were trading off the prestige value of
carrying the Imperial against considerable additional extra costs. The
dealership where my car was originally purchased sold Plymouths and used
cars. I was told by the niece of the original owner he bought a new
Imperial every year, which made the additional effort worth it for the
dealer.

Hugh Hemphill
58 Imperial
San Antonio, Texas



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