The antenna cannot be secured without that plate. I’m using all genuine parts were possible, reproduction as an alternative. I had to involve my wife with this operation to hold the antenna base while I poked it through the holeWhat were you supposed/did you do with that huge great piece of flat metal?
I admire your bravery wi all that drilling you are doing!![]()
![]()
I think antijam’s 71 has a non standard support plate on the switch?It's weird looking at those two rear-end pics of a '71 & '72 and the alarm key switch being different and I'm pretty sure my '71 is slightly different again!
I wonder if they used up left over stock from whatever parts bin?
The flat plate is the reinforcement plate.
Unfortunately I didn’t have the copper ground strap so that yellow and green cable is something I made up for now.This is a late response to luckyrat's post above regarding the antenna plate. I had to replace the antenna cable (between antenna and radio) in my '64 a few years ago. C2s have a similar plate below the antenna and I was curious about its purpose, since it was connected to the chassis by a copper ground strap.
This is what I was told by a good NCRS contact in the US who is something of an electrical guru. Seems that the plate is more than just a reinforcement:
Since the Corvette body is fiberglass, there is no ground plane beneath the antenna mast to define the length of the antenna in signal-reception terms. In high-strength signal areas this is not a problem, but in areas where signal strength is low the radio needs all the help it can get. Having a ground plane at the base of the antenna reinforces the standing wave aspect (don't ask!) of the incoming signal and improves reception quality.
Therefore, a small metal plate was placed below the antenna to act as a ground plane. It is connected to the chassis so that it has an 'earth reference'. This is required because the radio uses the chassis for ground reference back to the battery, and the amplifier in the radio needs the antenna to be working from the same ground reference.
Chris Sale
'64 Coupe
Presume either aesthetics or practical difficulty reasons for moving the key switch after the rear end revamp ‘74 on. You can imagine the discussions about where to reposition it.The '74 to '77 alarm key switch was on the front left wing, but by '78 it was incorporated into the drivers door lock.
How much value will it add?Fit one to the other side too , then it will be like the early `side lock` bonnet Jaguar E Types which the purists really lust after![]()