Oh, and one additional free piece of general advice, about fixing Kaisers and other older cars (I have a Kaiser and 4 Studebakers) Beside your FLAPS (Friendly Local Auto Parts Store) with the knowledgeable-sometimes- old guys and gals, and tractor dealers/farm supply, for certain mechanical repairs try out large truck/vehicle repair places! They are familiar with king pins, brake drums, re-arcing springs, zerk fittings, axle grease, 'swaging' and similar bits of for many of now arcane lore, as lots of transports and other big equipment garbage trucks, street sweepers you get the idea, still use simple & strong tech (but give basic service and lubricate often!!) rather than the "buy at an inflated price from the factory and never do any service yourself for the next 200,000 miles" which is for all new cars. For a ludicrous example, locally, the big dairy/cheese maker for the Island has a big fleet of tanker trucks to pick up raw milk. They figured out that they were spending so much money outside for rehabbing engines that they got into the business of rebuilding engines themselves, and eventually, for the public. So, when I had the very tired engine in my 49 Kaiser Special rebuilt, a local corner garage guy who is used to restoring old time tractors for retired farmers to put on their front lawns and to occasionally cut their lawns (saw one yesterday, small lawn, BIG tractor, 85 years old, and cutting at super slow turtle speed <ggg>) took it apart, the dairy company boiled out the block, cleaned and honed etc, and the local tractor supply supplied all the parts, and the local garage guy put it all back together. The total price was a tiny fraction of what a specific car engine rebuilder would have charged...ISTR less than $1600 all told, rather than the $3500 people seem to expect. My $0.02 from a certified 4x CASO...and come to think of it, a certified CAKO as well <gg>
Another local guy rehabs all my starters and generators, and also rigged up an ingenious 6 AND 12 volt and alternator system, using two 6 volt batteries in series/parallel to start the Kaiser on 12 (handy on cold mornings) but to keep everything else strictly original and 6 volt positive ground, with the option of running something modern on 12 volt with a bit of extra wiring if I so wish.