Thanks.
I go to that site all the time. Sometimes it is hard to see certain components at all (starter, power steering gear, power steering pump, etc. ) let alone figure out how they are finished in the photos. Speaking not just of Motoring Investments but similar sources of information...in some cases, it turns out the original factory finish or appearance (at least compared to my car) was not the same. While the restorations when done appear complete, the pics don't seem to focus much on the actual mechanical components. On these sites, I've yet to see the inside of a differential, a disassembled driveshaft, power steering pump/gear, wipe assembly/motor, heater mechanism/exchanger, rear axle (being restored), window mechanism (being restored), AC Restoration/Refurbishment.
For instance, I would love to see the actual restoration of a door panel including the hardboard, padding, rivets, etc...usually it's presented as here it is unfinished and voila, here is it finished...it could be a perfect restoration underneath there or just some cardboard and epoxy.
I know a lot of people don't care, but it seems like most of the parts I get these days do not look like the originals...even the rebuilt/re-manufactured parts have been finished differently and often with material substitutions. I realize almost no one will ever know that on my car the aluminum pinion housing on the starter housing should be cast iron, that the pulley on the front of the alternator should be aluminum & back-finned not steel and fan like, and on and on. To me, change enough of these things and the integrity feels lost...meanwhile, I'm doing a resto-mod so label me a big hypocrite!
I figured as long as I'm restoring the car, not just trying to keep it running, I should try to find out what was original. Yu might wonder why I don't just use my original parts. It is certainly easy enough to figure out the original material (assuming my part is original) but the car was in such deplorable shape having sat unprotected for many years (without hood, trunk lid, roof, etc.) most things had no finish to speak of or has een given a blast of black paint from a shaker can.
I find Pagoda SL Group to be a very good source of information which is why I come here.
Still it get frustrating...it can be challenging to find a definitive answer to a seemingly simple question like whether the wiper motor was zinc galvanized, zinc plated (White/Yellow), cadmium plated (White/Yellow) from the factory in 1967.