Question on book: Corvette Weekend Projects: Maintenance and Repair how Tos for 1968-1982
Has anyone read the book
Corvette Weekend Projects: Maintenance and Repair how Tos for 1968-1982 by: John Pfanstiehl, Paul Zazarine Comments on its content and depth of detail are appreciated! |
Re: Question on book: Corvette Weekend Projects:
I've had this book for several years. It does come in handy for some projects but don't expect it to help you rebuild your suspension or engine.
If i recall it covers mostly cosmetic repairs. ps: you've got to shorten your title line or replys won't post. |
Re: Question on book: Corvette Weekend Projects: (6t9l4t6)
I've always thought it was pretty funny that the book is titled weekend projects but the picture on the cover shows a couple washing the car :skep:
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Re: Question on book: Corvette Weekend Projects: Maintenance and Repair how Tos for 1968-1982
A lot of fluff. Interesting reading but no detail and lots of gaps. Don't get it if you are thinking of using it as a guide.
tom... |
Re: Question on book: C
Is that the book that starts off with the guy buying a chrome bumper project car? And then there's page upon page of superficial cosmetic repairs and at the end there's the car looking fully restored?
If so, it's CRAP. Save your money. |
Corvette Weekend Projects: Maintenance and Repair how Tos
Has anyone read the book Corvette Weekend Projects: Maintenance and Repair how Tos for 1968-1982. Comments on its content and depth of detail are appreciated! I have it and have read it but also have a number of C3 restoration, technical guides each with a different purpose and no one does it all. Especially when you consider today's shop manuals are three volumes and about a foot high. My view is this, a basic owner's reference set includes an AIM (assembly instruction manual), Chevy Passenger Service Manual (or Corvette Shop Manual after 79) and the NCRS Technical Manual if stock appearance is your objective. C3 restoration guides are a mix of these three references and typically because of the volume of information that must be conveyed...something gets left out. If you've got a guide with lots of photos...ask yourself what did they leave out to produce this book. Highly technical books lack the theory of operation. Photo rich books lack the detail of explanation of disassembly. Restoration books are not necessarily maintenance books Maintenance books are not restoration books. No book takes the place of doing a restoration/maintenance project. The weekend project book packages information into general maintenance projects an owner can take on and complete over a weekend...like washing the car! It takes on the less completed projects...you could accomplish the same thing with the shop manual. Hope this helps. |
Re: Corvette Weekend Projects: Maintenance and Repair how Tos (hunt4cleanair)
It's another guide with a little different perspective. It's not that expensive. Sometimes a photo from just that angle is worth a lot. Comprehensive, no. Useful in context with others, yes.
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Re: Corvette Weekend Projects: Maintenance and Repair how Tos (markdtn)
It's another guide with a little different perspective. It's not that expensive. Sometimes a photo from just that angle is worth a lot. Comprehensive, no. Useful in context with others, yes. :cheers: |
Re: Question on book: C (The Dude)
Is that the book that starts off with the guy buying a chrome bumper project car? And then there's page upon page of superficial cosmetic repairs and at the end there's the car looking fully restored? If so, it's CRAP. Save your money. |
Re: Question on book: C (69stingray)
"weekend projects" is junk. i got it for a x-mas gift one year and was done with it in 5 minutes. buy an assembly manual instead.
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