I've used Hamtramck Library as a good source of generalized information for years thanks to another member sharing. But it's terribly lacking in specialized information about this later era of it's coverage. Especially in regards to details it does otherwise cover. Such as the black and white, and gold '77 A66 stripes which I must assume were a spring special. There's no information on when the color charts were opened to the A66 option either, although the earliest car I've recorded was built Jan 28. A white Roadrunner with the K6R upper stripe set that's under restoration in TN. I've found two wrong color Dodges built on 318 day, but none earlier. The Plymouth and both Dodges I currently own are May and June built cars. I'm happy to have the updated trunk floor in them. But as always I am dealing with surviving examples to expand my knowledge, with no access to internal memo's, prints, or 'to dealer' literature or memo's. So while I do my best, I'm really on the shortest stick as it were in hoping to learn. My desire to learn or maybe just my attempts to be useful while having a dry sarcasm, or maybe simply passing along 'official information' I've encountered which is like above mentioned, not entirely correct, has rubbed a few the wrong way over the years. But I just try to do my best and always welcome correction from better learned people so I become better and others benefit too. Often a phone conversation leads me to more information than I'd ever expected was out there today. Thanks to people who learned the in's and out's in time before such information became otherwise lost. Today we have a new generation getting into these budget friendly cars, and they've little to guide them while they share their experiences and questions on a platform that summarily deletes them in short time. I'm only about as much help as I can be, and usually referring them to learn from more studied sources I've been fortunate enough to encounter myself. I've long seen your informative or helpful posts. But never realized the depth of your knowledge and the value you have to pass along to that generation who will someday hopefully keep our passion alive if time were on your side to chronicle it, until just today. So I really hope that you do begin doing some uploads of the files you've saved. I don't wish to be out of line, but while my own site is admittedly of little value today, as it has been since before my purchase, I would welcome cross posting, if you do upload, since I've no intention to ever let the previous tragedy occur again so long as I live. And as I said before, I've also hope to invest the money required for professional revamp and restoration of that site too. It may not generate traffic like here, but if it does nothing other than provide the full archives it once held again I will be satisfied in having done my part to maintain this part of history.
If you have another interesting informational site, I would enjoy reading through their archives as well.