That is a great write-up.
We had a retired GM mechanic here locally that found his niche in replacing all the 80s GM power antennas that failed.
You would bring your car to his shop. You would go to the waiting room. He would go to work. There were no windows. He would already have a rebuilt unit ready to go. He would have the job done in something ridiculous like less than an hour. Nobody was allowed to watch to learn his secret. I don't know what he charged because I never had the service done. I heard it was reasonable. He would then rebuild your unit for the next guy.
Could you please help me get in touch with this guy, I'm from the Cleveland area and need this done. Thanks!That is a great write-up.
We had a retired GM mechanic here locally that found his niche in replacing all the 80s GM power antennas that failed.
You would bring your car to his shop. You would go to the waiting room. He would go to work. There were no windows. He would already have a rebuilt unit ready to go. He would have the job done in something ridiculous like less than an hour. Nobody was allowed to watch to learn his secret. I don't know what he charged because I never had the service done. I heard it was reasonable. He would then rebuild your unit for the next guy.
I really would appreciate it, thanks!Let me ask around. He was an old timer YEARS ago.... he's likely retired by now.... or even worse.
Yeah I have big hands with a perfect black og paint job on my 84 cutlass with only 35k miles that is clean as can be so I want to sub out the work.The risk is if you have nice paint you care about/Popeye forearms/Gorilla monster hands or some combination thereof. Otherwise, it's not horrible. The first time I ever did one on an Olds I took the entire friggin' outer fender off. Then figured out I didn't have to go that far. Doesn't get worse than that. That specialty tool spanner wrench for the antenna nut isn't absolutely necessary, but it makes it a whole lot easier. I have one of those wrenches...somewhere. Nice to have if you need to do a job like this.
As shown in the writeup, using several feet of masking tape can save the paint from unintentional scrapes and getting the lower part of the outer fender loose is critical. It's pretty flimsy/flexible though. But if you have Popeye arms/Monster hands- well, you probably would be better to farm it out. Clearances are tight if you don't remove the entire outer fender.
I plan on doing my 87's cable replacement pretty soon, so I may make a "how-to" for Cutlass. It's 99.9% the same as the GP, although you won't be getting the inner fender liner out. I got extra new complete assemblies I could simply swap in to make it much easier, but the motor's fine. It's just the cable broke. When I do it, I'll go into how to replace the cable as well. A lot of people put bolts back in the casing, which works, but you can rivet them back together if you have a riveter tool and the correct size rivets.
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