It's a world of vinyl, color, and aroma that only a true musclecar fanatic can appreciate. Yes, the inside of your ride is where the whole experience happens. And whether it's hued in three shades of blue, black, or red, the quality of your interior speaks volumes about how serious you are about your car. Most importantly, a discriminating restoration demands the interior look new and exactly original. Many Mopars have led a rugged life and have cracked dashes, worn door panels, and broken trim and plastic to prove it. Often finding N.O.S. or good reproduction items to maintain that factory new appearance is difficult, to say the least.
But there's good news. Just Dashes in Van Nuys, California, can completely restore aging original and worn interior parts to look, last, and fit like new. This includes dashpads, vinyl door panels, headrests, plastic, and most interior parts. The new material used for these restorations is formulated with modern UV inhibitors that allow the vinyl to last much longer in the sun. If your musclecar has the more unique molded door panels, such as those found on early '70s Mopar E-Bodies, they can be restored as well. Or if you are considering converting your car to factory power windows, many door panels can be altered to accept the power window switch without revealing the previous crank window hole. For some vehicles, the instrument panel and gauges can be restored to a better-than-factory look.
The process to restore most of these items is labor intensive and requires a good bit of time, but the bottom line is, if you need to restore almost any interior item, chances are that Just Dashes can help. To learn more about this we followed along as the Just Dashes team worked their magic on some '63 Plymouth interior items. The door panels suffered from age and grime, the dashpad from years of harsh sunlight, and the kick panels and arm rests were dramatically faded. Check out the process and the stunning results as these items are transformed from old to better than new.
 The Just Dashes team begins by completely stripping the existing vinyl and foam from the baseboards and making new duplicate boards to assemble the new stamped material to. With the old panel as a template, even the factory holes are precisely replicated. Replacing the old inner-panels with new boards serves two purposes. First, the new panels provide a better foundation to build the new assembly to. Second, the original and musty smelling panels are discarded so the replacement panel will smell new. If you're missing your original panels, Just Dashes may have existing panels to use to cut new ones. |  For our '63, Just Dashes had brand-new, factory correct, multi-colored, and dielectrically stamped vinyl panels. Like the unique originals, these are manufactured in the original three shades of blue in the correct grains. |  One of the critical steps taken to ensure the new panels will fit snugly to the inner door is the use of the original upper metal shells. These upper shells are transferred to the new panel assemblies, and provide an accurate and tight fit to the inner door structure. |
 After the upper shells have been removed from the old panel, they are media blasted and painted with high-gloss enamel paint for protection. Next, they are aligned and riveted to the new inner panels. |  Just Dashes uses experienced craftsmen to assemble the new panels to exact factory (or better) condition. The skillful use of a heat gun is used to fit and wrap the vinyl snuggly over the top of the panel where it is secured with adhesive and hidden staples. |  A look behind the new panel assembly shows how well the vinyl and shell are secured. New window felts are also installed to all the panels. |