PhilA Posted February 24, 2019 Author Posted February 24, 2019 Yup, this engine is rather thick-walled, rather like my lawnmower's sand-cast block and represents casting technology pre-war. Chevrolet's V8 represented the era of a compact, strong, lightweight engine in comparison to most other offerings, even from their stable. I believe at the time, Buick's overhead sixes and eights were considered the pinnacle of automotive propulsion. Please feel free to correct me, this is from memory, late in the evening. Phil cort1977, Skizzer and Junkman 3
Junkman Posted February 24, 2019 Posted February 24, 2019 No, you are correct! Before the SBC, that '53 launched Nailhead Buick V8, which replaced their own OHV straight eight, which was miles ahead of the Pontiac by default, was deemed state of the art. I can tell you from personal experience what a fucking boat anchor that was, if you were into anything other than torque. My first car was a '60 LeSabre with the 364 after all. Enter Mopar and you might begin to understand why 50s automotive America was what it was. cort1977 and PhilA 2
PhilA Posted February 24, 2019 Author Posted February 24, 2019 Very much so. However this engine rather represents the end of an era- I think it was the last production L-head straight eight (possibly Packard dragged it on a little longer). It's got a very flat torque curve but has a limited rev range and is quite thirsty for the amount of power it produces, mainly down to siamesed intake ports and overall head breathing (something Austin pioneered in the OHV world with the A series).The intake manifold is so bloody long you can't keep the mixture right at high RPM across all bores and the exhaust manifold suffers similar problems with pulsing, though that does lead to the wonderful noise they produce. It's lazy, slow and effortless. If this series of characteristics didn't exist however, I doubt we would have seen the hotrod scene quite as we did, when we did. Phil Junkman, tooSavvy and egg 3
Junkman Posted February 24, 2019 Posted February 24, 2019 Packard launched a 'modern' OHV V8 in 1955, which means it did some catching up alongside Pontiac.Pontiac went on and did some wide track, the GTO and the Trans Am. Packard didn't. PhilA 1
PhilA Posted February 24, 2019 Author Posted February 24, 2019 The auto industry went through a major change in the USA in the late fifties- affluent thirty-somethings not long out of the military getting a taste of freedom in the form of Formica and household appliances. Living the dream (heavily subsidized by the government in the form of bonds). Then the next generation came along and started to become interested in it all in the sixties and it took off again, and looped in their thirties with the beginning of the muscle car era. Then Cuba. Nixon. Big bumpers, expensive fuel, recession, smog and the responsibility of late middle age... Phil egg and mercedade 2
Clanger Posted February 24, 2019 Posted February 24, 2019 I'm not in Napoleonville. I'm in Larose. Napoleonville is up Hwy 20 out of Thibodaux. PhilWho knew there was a place called Napoleonville in LA... must check Google maps before slagging off deep south French territory... STUNO and PhilA 2
Rocket88 Posted February 24, 2019 Posted February 24, 2019 First mass production ohh V8 was Oldsmobile's "Rocket" engine.......sweet thing, 135 bhp [which was a far bit back then for a 5 litre.............] PhilA and Squire_Dawson 2
PhilA Posted February 26, 2019 Author Posted February 26, 2019 Well, some jerk* decided to wreck into a major part of the power grid around here. So, out to the garage to fire up the kerosene lantern and continue work on the cylinder head. It's not bad. Not great but not bad. The front end of it appears to have been leaking past the gasket slightly. I'm going to see if it actually needs a skim or not once it's all thoroughly clean. Phil *Edit: It was a police car that wrecked into the pole. tooSavvy, Squire_Dawson, purplebargeken and 2 others 5
tooSavvy Posted February 26, 2019 Posted February 26, 2019 ^^ I imagine that shot as of a princely dining table.. His lordship sitting at the far end, err indoors this end. "Pass the salt!" paulplom, PhilA and Squire_Dawson 3
PhilA Posted February 27, 2019 Author Posted February 27, 2019 With a little careful work, the cylinder head has shown to be: LargeCleanIn acceptably good condition just to put a new gasket on and reuse Next up, block deck. Phil 320touring, Rocket88, LightBulbFun and 14 others 17
PhilA Posted March 1, 2019 Author Posted March 1, 2019 Hooo boy. There's 30 bolts holding the torus on. That there is called "Being sure the gearbox isn't going to fall off the engine". Helpfully though you can see there The usefully provided drain plug for it, which is a feature missed on most torque converters. Made a pass over the block deck with my razor blade. Everything looks good, no signs of visible cracks. Again trying to be thorough, the previous fitter wasn't and there's signs of blow-by between the bores on the flywheel end of the head. I'll chase the head bolt threads out with a tap, give everything a thorough clean and oil then it's all ready to go together again after that. Phil Scruffy Bodger, mrbenn, meshking and 13 others 16
PhilA Posted March 1, 2019 Author Posted March 1, 2019 As a reminder to myself, the gearbox takes Dexron-III (H) fluid. Torus bolts 60lb/ft. LightBulbFun 1
Squire_Dawson Posted March 1, 2019 Posted March 1, 2019 ^^ I imagine that shot as of a princely dining table.. His lordship sitting at the far end, err indoors this end. "Pass the salt!" The weird and wonderful world of TooSavvy. The Moog, tooSavvy, egg and 4 others 7
PhilA Posted March 2, 2019 Author Posted March 2, 2019 A fresh set of blades tonight saw the deck fully cleaned. A bit of brass brush action saw the engine/chassis number easily visible, cleaning the paint out of the stamps. The deck, now fully cleaned, with the areas around the valves decoked and the piston crowns clean. Cranks over nicely now. Covered it back up in storage oil. Last thing to do on the top is chase the head bolt threads out. Phil LabRat, mat_the_cat, Rocket88 and 14 others 17
adw1977 Posted March 2, 2019 Posted March 2, 2019 There's something quite beautiful about those eight pistons and 16 valves doing their dance. PhilA, coalnotdole, egg and 2 others 5
320touring Posted March 2, 2019 Posted March 2, 2019 There's something quite beautiful about those eight cylinders and 16 valves doing their dance.It's the right ratio:) 2 valves per cylinder. Bringer of comfort and torque PhilA and egg 2
PhilA Posted March 2, 2019 Author Posted March 2, 2019 Continuing on the video theme, I found a film of one of these (well, nearly one of these but it's the same engine and box) being driven from cold. That's kinda how it should sound- his is a bit lumpy from cold- and shift gears, at least. Mine will be more quiet, but that's what I'm aiming for, particularly with the gearbox. Phil Burnside, Rocket88 and purplebargeken 3
purplebargeken Posted March 2, 2019 Posted March 2, 2019 Lovely work Sir, as always. PhilA and LightBulbFun 2
Squire_Dawson Posted March 2, 2019 Posted March 2, 2019 By the end of the 1950's Bunkie Knudsen transformed Pontiac. PhilA 1
PhilA Posted March 3, 2019 Author Posted March 3, 2019 Started chasing the threads through tonight. Slow going but worth it. Angle tightening has its' place. These unfortunately get done to 60 lb/ft. One of my friends sent me this picture today, also. I started thinking about fuel injection. Mustn't get carried away! Made a shopping list of parts- the head bolts are less bad than initially thought (was dirt, not rust) so $123 of engine bits should see it back together. I'm going to have to wait to order the gearbox rebuild kit ($304), and the alternator ($180).Still have things to get on with though. Phil mercedade, egg, Burnside and 9 others 12
PhilA Posted March 5, 2019 Author Posted March 5, 2019 I can now make 8 identical pieces of toast at once. That's as clean as it is gonna get. Phil mercedade, Squire_Dawson, stuboy and 15 others 18
Asimo Posted March 5, 2019 Posted March 5, 2019 I'd like that head to hang on the wall in my white room.
PhilA Posted March 5, 2019 Author Posted March 5, 2019 I would suggest finding the wood studs in the wall first because it'll pull down any lesser plasterboard in short order. Lightweight alloy this is not Phil LightBulbFun 1
SiC Posted March 5, 2019 Posted March 5, 2019 Why has Cylinder 1 and 8 have flat depressions in that head? Or is it the camera playing tricks. LightBulbFun 1
PhilA Posted March 5, 2019 Author Posted March 5, 2019 Experts suggest some sort of manufacturing process or something. (They don't know). Haters gonna hate. I like the color. Phil RayMK, Lacquer Peel, LabRat and 11 others 14
PhilA Posted March 6, 2019 Author Posted March 6, 2019 Oh dear. I have incurred the wrath of the Pontiac club by painting my engine the wrong shade of green. Phil cort1977, Squire_Dawson, tooSavvy and 5 others 8
Rocket88 Posted March 6, 2019 Posted March 6, 2019 Stone him! Stone him......................... Squire_Dawson, PhilA and cort1977 3
Sir Snipes Posted March 6, 2019 Posted March 6, 2019 Oh dear. I have incurred the wrath of the Pontiac club by painting my engine the wrong shade of green. PhilYou should be ashamed.
Momentary Lapse Of Reason Posted March 6, 2019 Posted March 6, 2019 They will come round to sort you out when you add the pink polka-dots... tooSavvy, DeeJay and Rocket88 3
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