no, the 66 has a different body line for the front fenders... the body line angles downward close to the headlights, the 65 bodyline continues straight to the headlights...
Not sure about inner fenders being compatible.
I believe 1995 through 2005 fenders are all the same. Surely a 1996 and 1997 fender will fit a 1998 model.
I owned a 75 model Impala and the blower motor was located under the hood, passenger side of vehicle,down in the fender/fender well area, hiddenbehind a/c unit
I dont recommend Squires for gigs. Squires are like the cheap versions of Fenders. Ex: Squire is to Fender as Epiphone is to Gibson If you mean "squire" the model of fender guitar its great, but the knockoff of fender isn't so great
According to ADP Hollander, the answer is NO, but I would think if you replaced the entire headder pannel with it, since the fenders come do different shapes in the nose, it may work. You would have to change headlight assemblies and front bumper cover as well. basically the entire front clip. I'm sure you could make it work.
No, the 66 model is different then the 67 model. I am not shure if the 65 model would fit - it is possible.
Most wrecking yards can tell you. They have a book that matches up parts. The actual fender didn't change until '76 I think. I had a '77 and a '79 and they were the same. Only difference was the front end cone and the taillights. (which were interchangeable)
Yes, the left front fenders are identical for the 95 and 96 model year Accord. They share the same exact OEM part number: 60261-SV4-508ZZ
Yes it is. See related link for more information about this model.
Fender started using serial numbers in the early 1950s. Pre-serial guitars are extremely rare. Later model guitars that have no serial may have had the neck replaced.
1968-72 are the same fenders. There may be minor differences in the other years that wouldn't be hard to change, just have to hold them up next to each other and see.
You'd also need fenders and hood from a 1998-2002 model for a satisfactory conversion
Unplug the front fender tip light (if applicable on your Road King model) and loosen the nuts on the four allenhead screws that hold the fender to the fork sliders. Carefully remove the four screws while supporting the fender, then lift the fender up and out from between the fork sliders. To prevent scratches you might want to tape rags to the bottom of the fender, which is the widest part.