C

Classic Cars

— Restoration, appreciation, and the open road
64 members Created Apr 2026

My 1965 Mustang passed its first inspection post-restoration

My guide to restoring the dashboard on a classic car, because the dash is what you look at every time you drive and it should be right.

The vinyl-covered dashes on most American muscle cars from the 1960s have a specific texture and color that repo pieces often don't match correctly. The original texture was applied by a heated press — modern reproductions are often embossed. The difference is subtle but visible under scrutiny.

The gauges are the other critical element. The faces are printed on specific paper with specific ink that ages in a specific way. Repo gauges are improved but the originals, if restorable, are worth restoring. A gauge face restoration specialist can bring faded needles and cracked bezels back to original appearance without altering the authenticity of the component.

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