Hi Alfred,
I`ve had the car since 1987. In the early years, it was in good shape and I used it quite a lot (in Michigan), but my wife, whom I love dearly, is an “autophobe” (I think I just made up that word), which means she doesn’t like cars, doesn’t like to drive, and unless the car is really comfortable, doesn’t even like to ride. (She didn’t learn to drive until she was 35 years old, and then only by necessity). That’s a psychologically difficult situation for a mechanical engineer who spent 34 years designing and developing automobile powertrains and doing advanced automotive engineering.
When we take out the Pagoda, for her it’s either too cold, or too windy, too noisy or too sunny with the top down, or its too hot with the top up or the hardtop on.
The climate here in Quebec City doesn’t help, with a six-month winter during which the car is stored, a one month spring, during which it rains, and a one month fall, during which it is to cool for top down driving. That leaves four months (maximum) of summer, two months of which it’s too hot not to have AC. I love driving with the top down and if there are a few hours that are appropriate to that kind of driving, I lower the top. The AC will be for my wife. I’m also planning to install lots of noise and heat insulation and a modern four channel stereo radio (USA-4 DIN or Retro Sound) as well as cruise control for me and a wind screen for her hair.
I’m trying to maximize Pagoda time. Making the car enjoyable for my wife is a big part of that effort. I’m too old to worry about collector car purism, however, my philosophy, like Jim Villers, is drill no holes (except for the two hoses). I may be a purist but I’m not a masochist.
It doesn’t hurt that it will add about 15% to the value of the car, and will therefore pay for itself, at least on paper. When it’s back together, I’m going to drive it as a daily driver for six months out of the year and store it for the other six months – until I die or can’t drive any more. By the way, that statement that there are two months that are too hot not to have AC, is my statement, not hers. Up here in the Northeast, the ozone layer is THIN.
So to re-ask the original question, does it matter what kind of AC it is, once I`ve decided to add AC, or should I just make it easy on myself?
Tom Kizer