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TIP-TOP CONVERTIBLE ROOF
INSTALLATION
Installing a new convertible top on a luxury car
Upholstery professional D. Chase begins removing the convertible
top of a 1984 Buick Riviera, noting how the top was originally
installed in order to reinstall it in the same manner. The location of
holes, staples, studs and glue are all noted and photographed.
By D. Chase and Angelo Van Bogart
ot all cars are equal, nor are their convertible tops. No-frills cars are
likely to have relatively simple tops, but luxury cars often have
more complicated tops, such as the roof covering on the featured 1984
Buick Riviera convertible. Like their blueblood Cadillac Eldorado
counterparts, Buick Riviera convertibles of the 1980s were built for
General Motors by American Sunroof Corp. (ASC). Ironically, ASC built a
top that, when in the up position, mimicked the steel roof it cut off to
make the convertible. Although this in itself is complicated, ASC also