I had always suspected that like other C-body cars, where the rear seat leg room increased as the wheelbase did, yet the front legroom was "the same", that the Imperials were similar. This also then led to my suspicion that the powertrain section of the car, related to trans cooler lines, would be the same (as the wheelbase difference was in the rear floorpan area). I was corrected in that on the Online Imperial Club forum about 20 years ago. It was pointed out to me that all of the wheelbase difference was in front of the cowl, which meant the normal C-body trans cooler lines would need to be longer. I got busy doing research on the rear leg room dimension, which revealed, contrary to my suspicion, to be the same as for a New Yorker. This was later confirmed in the great Fuselage C-body article in "Collectible Automobile", that all "cabin dimensions" were common to both Chryslers and Imperials.
I knew that Imperial front ends were different than normal C-body cars. I always suspected that was due to an isolated K-frame section for better NVH isolation than on normal Chryslers. I may need to find the body dimension checking dimensions (as in body shop collision "squaring" checks) to possibly get a view of the total Imperial construction. I believe I can find them in a FSM.
In the OIC discussion, seems like somebody produced pictures of the engine compartments of a Fuselage Imperial and a similar Chrysler, with more distance between the engine and the cowl, to prove their point? As I have found out over the years, things are just different on Imperials, underhood, for whatever reason, than on similar New Yorkers.
CBODY67