To follow up on the above. GM didn't really make all the parts they used to build their cars...they bought them from suppliers. One company who probably made the steering wheels and other dash goodies, one for the seatbelts, one for the seat backs, seat frames, trunk mats, and on and on and on. What happened to those companies? What happened to those molds and dies? And did, say the seat backs, really cost all that much back then? Today, a reproduction pair costs $99. In 69, you could buy the entire car for about $2500. So, 25 pairs of seat backs today equals one complete brand new 69 Camaro 50 years ago. What was $99 worth then? A base Camaro today is about ten times the cost of a base Camaro in 69. Does that mean that seat backs cost $10 then? I doubt GM paid $10 for just the plastic seat backs. Hell, I bet at most, they paid a buck or two for them...and that was sold at a profit to GM...not a large profit, but a profit still.
So, how can we not duplicate this process again? What was done then that is not done today? If they are making molds to product these plastic pieces, then surely it cost the same money to make a mold that is spot on as it is to make a mold that is not even close. Is it that hard to make a correctly formed mold? Is it that much more expensive?
I am not so sure it is the market, as all of us here are willing to pay more for a part that is correct. Hell, rosewood steering wheels are selling for $1,500 because reproductions suck. This amount of money for a part that cost GM $5 to make in 1969. So, what gives. If someone, no matter where, Taiwan, China, or USA are going to make parts for our cars, can they NOT go the extra yard to product a perfect part. Is the wood grain that hard to match? Is the shape of a panel that difficult to get the right measurements. These manufacturers are not starting from scratch like GM did, they have the items already made to match up with. The money is there...the quality is not. Maybe the sales of reproduction parts are as low as they are is because of quality is terrible. I bet whoever makes seat backs, would sell ten times more if they were correct...and that is at double the price they are selling them for now. If you tool a part, make it right. It takes the same amount of work to make the patterns, the molds, the dyes, the stamps, or whatever is used to mass produce, so, be exact. In 69, they used slide rules to make the machines that made our cars. Today, we have computers with lasers that can measure to the millionth of an inch, but we can't beat 50 year old tech.
I have money, I have the desire to purchase, what I don't have is the correct item for sale.