Just to make clear I was in no way suggesting that the Assembly Manuals were of no use or were always mistaken or different from how the car was originally assembled. As posted in many other threads they are a great place to start and provide allot of other details that can be of great help. But they are a collection of individual pages collected and assembled from a number of manuals printed at different times of the year and could not reflect, especially in 67, all the running changes and how the individual plants and workers choose to do some operations. The best outcome IMO is when the assembly manuals agree with how cars were built at the same time, same plant and in turn support each other in that way.
The Assembly Manuals are a great purchase for anyone interested in these cars and are the source of allot of discussions and discoveries. Glad Jim took the time and effort to rescue the originals he could get access to to provide us with at least what we have available today.
Now back to the subject at hand and building some great cars.