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By the way-the trunk is HUGE! I'd forgotten about those days when we used to sneak in 4 people to the drive in for the price of two!
The panel itself is held on by plastic clips pushed into the door. Gently pry on each side of each clip, then tilt out the bottom and lift up out of the window channel.
The culprit just might be the oil sending unit. It's in the back between the firewall in the middle. Reach back and feel it. If you hand is oily, it's bad! Many a rear main seal was replaced when it was the oil sending unit. The oil will run down the rear of the block.
But...it could be the rear main or pan gasket, or who knows where else. Clean the engine very good and look for it.
Where did you find this gem? What color etc?
Isell-I found this gem at Peggy's Classic Cars in Portland, OR. The car had only been driven 740 miles since 1989, when it had 39,512 miles on it.Has an interesting history. I had been keeping my eye on this lot, looking for something else, for sometime.Wasn't really looking for a 62, but when I saw this one, I jumped on it. It was just too nice. A guy was flying up from Gardena Ca the next day to look at it. The ad said "probably the nicest one in captivity" and I think it might be-at least for original cars. Color is Twilight Turquoise with white top and Turquoise interior. Just Gorgeous in and out. It runs like a watch, and is quite responsive for a Powerglide! Has a bit of a growl to it, like I remember. Definitely a fun, smooth ride! One of these days maybe I'll cruise it on up to Bellevue and we'll take it for a spin. Thanks for the lunch offer!
Sounds like a gorgeous Chevy!
I had a friend with a 72 Supreme coupe with a 350 4 barrel. I drove it every now and then - it was one fast car. All that kept you from speeding was the lousy brakes. He kept it till the frame rotted.
I got into a little friendly debate with my father last night. He's a big Chevy/Pontiac man, and knows a lot about their engines from the 50's, 60's, and early 70's, but his knowledge pretty much goes out about where the catalytic converter came in.
He was wondering if there was any real difference or advantage between the Chevy 305 that came out around 1976, and the Chevy 307 (NOT the Olds 307 from 1980 on) that was made from around 1968-73. He's insisting that they're the same engine. I know they're the same block, but the bore and stroke are a bit different (3.88 x 3.25 on the 307, and 3.74 x.3.47 on the 305). He knows a guy that's restoring an old 30's Ford pickup, but has a 305 he's putting in. I said he should just throw a 350 in, instead of trying to rebuild a 305.
Also, what about that little Chevy 262 that came out in the early 70's and went in the Vega (and Nova, I think) ? Was that related to the other Chevy smallblocks, or was it something else made totally unreliable, so it would fit the Vega perfectly? ;-)
-Andre
I'm not a Chevy expert but I'd guess there's no real advantage going with the shorter stroke 307, especially if you used a TPI 305 from an '80s Camaro.
BTW, there is one weak spot in the 318, at least for 1989. They had a run of bad camshafts, and the #8 lobe would tend to go bad. Happened to the 318 in my '89 Gran Fury, at 73,000 miles. The place I bought it from had swapped in a 318 from an '88, with 75,000 miles. The car now has about 113,000 on the body, 2K more than that on the engine.
One of my friends from college, his dad had a 1993 (?) Grand Cherokee with a 318 magnum, and they had engine troubles with it within the first 30,000 miles or so.
I don't think most of the guys around here wouldn't put the 318 on the list of the very best engines. For mainstream applications though, I'd take one in a hearbeat (no pun intended) over any Chevy smallblock, Pontiac 301, Ford smallblock, etc. But I'm a Mopar man, I have to say that ;-)
-Andre
I just remember the old Fiats and Lancias and all of the TROUBLE they were.
I guess I just assumed that with twice the cylinders the V-8's would be twice the trouble!
Jim
This was the most powerful engine to hit the street out of the showroom in the 70's.The LS6 454's forte was brute force and acceleration. Fed by a Holley 800 cfm four barrel carb, the LS6 was conservatively rated at 450 horsepower and 500 lb.ft of torque, but in reality it was much more potent(this was an advertised number in the books, the engine was actually putting out nearly 500hp stock!). Quarter mile times of just over 13 seconds at over 110 mph were easily achievable.
Specifications
This motor represents a high point in power for muscle cars. With 450 hp at 5600 rpm and 500 lb-ft at 3600 rpm you can easily see why. This is an engine designed to run hard! Some of the best pieces went into the LS6 to make it race ready.
In order to have an LS6 car the factory had to use special heavy duty parts on the car. Some of these features were: Deep groove pulleys, Heavy duty battery, 37 amp alternator, high pressure fuel pump, 6500 rpm redline tach (if ordered), dual snorkel or open element air cleaner (if cowl induction was not ordered), and a M22 heavy duty 4-speed or turbo 400 auto. These were some of the features that help make the 454 as mean as it was.
SPECS:
Engine Type :
Overhead Valve V8
454-cu-in. displacement
Large port closed chamber heads
Duration of 2.19 intake valves and 1.88 exhaust valves
11.25 to 1 compression
Solid lifter chamshaft with .520 lift
TRW forged aluminum domed pistons
Magnafluxed forged steel connecting rods with
7/16 rod bolts
Tuftrided forged 5140
steel crankshaft
Aluminum intake
800cfm 4 barrel Holley carburator
Manual Choke
Performance (in a 1970 Chevelle):
0-60 mph in 5.4 sec
107.1 mph in 13.12 sec
Top Speed of 130 mph
450hp @ 5600 rpm
500 lb-ft @ 3600 rpm
Long live the Chevy Big Block.
The times listed for the LS6 at www.musclecarclub.com are 6.1 for 0-60 and 13.7 @ 103 in the 1/4.
Sorry for the mis-quote.
And as for the Gross vs. Net. The gross HP was an understatement this has been proven by numerous road tests.
Car Craft ran a LS6 Chevelle through the quarter mile in 13.12 seconds at 107.1 mph!
Super Stock ran one in 13.20 seconds at 106 mph!
Finally Hot Rod ran a LS6 in 13.44 at 108.17 mph!
All these tests were done on bone stock cars with traction problems!
In October 1969 Super Stock tested an automatic LS6 with stock 4:10 gears. The car was treated to a set of headers and 10.5 X 15 slicks. This Chevelle ran 12.69 at 113.26 mph with a photographer driving!
Put on a set of slicks and open headers and you can run mid 12s all day! You can go even faster with simple carb and ignition mods! How does 11s sound?
"In October 1969 Super Stock tested an automatic LS6 with stock 4:10 gears. The car was treated to a set of headers and 10.5 X 15 slicks. This Chevelle ran 12.69 at 113.26 mph with a photographer driving!"
In an auto car with slicks the driver isn't going to make a huge factor in the time, so because a photographer did it doesn't really mean a whole lot.
"You can go even faster with simple carb and ignition mods! How does 11s sound?"
How does an increase of 3/4 to 1+ seconds with just carb and ignition mods sound? Um, impossible. Maybe if you bolt on 2 4 barrels and ram air and advance the timing to an insane amount, run race gas, etc,but I don't think counts as a simple carb/ignition mod.
The vast majority of cars back then weren't anywhere near as fast as people thought/think they were/are. A lot of people out there think a 350 HP 400 ci GTO back then will blow the doors off any modern pony/performance car. But it wont. It sounds like the LS6 maybe one of the exceptions, and it was really pretty quick. But I don't buy that it had 500 net HP. It's not that quick.
I remember they also tested an intermediate sedan with a 318-2bbl, 3-speed Torqueflite, and I believe a 2.76 rear end. Can't remember if it was a Coronet or a Satellite though. Anyway, it did 0-60 in 10 seconds.
Seems to me like a muscle car with a big-block should have been a far cry from a 4-door sedan with a base 318...much more than just 3 seconds of difference.
I forget what 1/4 mile times and top speed were though, so maybe the Charger had alot more pull at higher speeds.
BTW, the 318 back then had 230 hp gross, while the 440's had 350-375, I think. I don't know what these translated to in net hp though. A 1972 318-2 has 150 hp, but they also cut compression that year, so the 1971 and earlier may actually have a bit more than 150 net.
I've heard that Chrysler's 2 most underrated engines were the 426 Hemi and the 340 smallblock. They were rated at 425 and 275 hp, respectively, but in net terms, I believe they still had 350 and 245.
I'm just curious...does anybody know about what the 0-60 times and 1/4 mile times should be on a 1968 Dart 318-2, with dual exhaust, and an 8.75 rear-end with 2.76 gears? I know it's not a muscle car by any stretch of the imagination! I figured that if Consumer Reports got an intermediate with a 318 to do 0-60 in 10 seconds, then a Dart, which would be about 300 lb lighter, should be good for around 8.5-9, shouldn't it?
-Andre
No offense, but the Beav's post sounds like it was taken directly from one of those musclecar books that uses words like "ground pounding" and "pavement ripping". Between that kind of hype, and the hype they were dishing out when the cars were new, you've really got to approach road tests and their numbers with lots of caution.
However I can assure you that you can easily get this engine/car into the low 10's even high 9's with minimal mods and without breaking the bank.
I myself own a #'s matching LS6 Chevelle SS and I have been able to run in the 10's consistantly.
Brushing into the high 9's when the weather/moon is right.This in a 3400+lb all steel auto.
My ride is Show-N-Go so it's 95% stock. I only sunk about $1100 into the engine and chassis setup/millwork/parts.
Some things are too good to be true
This car/engine aren't one of them.
I can assure you of that.
Guess they must improve with age?
Longhorns, they was...
We drove the cars out to a deserted street in an industrial area, got side by side and nailed it at about 5 mph. The 348 actually kept a slight edge on the Olds until about 70 or so, when we backed off. The Chevy was probably a couple hundred pounds heavier than the Cutlass but had fairly short gears, and the 4 speed helped too, but I was surprised that a boat anchor 348 could keep up with a more modern engine.
Some engines have been hyped so much over the years in books--and their oral equivilent, the BS sessions--that guys like the beav don't know where fact ends and fantasy begins.
But Andre has a good point. If a family sedan could do 0-60 in 10 seconds, why couldn't a musclecar with twice the hp go twice as fast, or almost.
First, big block musclecars are heavy. The engine is maybe 200 pounds heavier than a small block, depending. The transmission is the stronger heavier version. So is the driveshaft and rear axle. Sometimes the brakes are bigger, and maybe the frame is heavier or the unibody is reinforced to handle the extra power. Musclecars usually had the heavier top-line interior (the Road Runner was one exception). And as musclecars "matured" in the late '60s they tended to have more power options.
All of this means a musclecar has more weight to get off the line than a no-frills economy sedan.
Second, a hi-perf big block has hotter valve timing than a family sedan engine so it can make power up to usually about 5 grand, and its torque peak is around 3600 rpm. The family sedan engine is tuned more for throttle response, economy and a smooth idle, and it usually peaks around 2400 rpm. So the economy engine puts out less torque but gets to it a little quicker.
Of course, the musclecar has a better weight-to-horsepower ratio and in the quarter mile it's no contest, but off the line the race is closer. Isell's story about a 361 Chrysler beating a 389 GTO in a stoplight race shows what can happen. The 389 was putting out more hp but the 361 out-torqued it off the line.
Reminds me of the "swiss cheese" Pontiac Catalinas with their frames drilled for lightness. A little radical even for the street racers.
You got two wipers with the first Road Runner, but not much more. It was basically a taxi cab with a big engine.
I look through the board every so often and once in a while I see a post that I think is fun and interesting. This one 'best V8s ever' was one of them. So I post a message. Then I post another to give a little personal experience and some info on the topic with an apology for a mis-quote in a prievious post.
But then I come back to see if there are any related posts only to get pissed off.
I get to read that a 'smart guy' named 'speedshift' is using lines like "I don't know what a 10 sec. car looks or acts like" and "guys like me don't know the difference beetween fantasy and reality".
Well let me respond to that.
John if you would like to critique me fine, but here's a little F.Y.I. . I've been building up cars for 20+ years and racing them for about the same. I have no idea when, if ever you have been at the track to run a car or have seen one of my cars at the track. But until you have, maybe you should sling your mud some where else. Quotes like these I take very personal, especially with all of the time I've invested into my cars. There's a big difference between preaching and practicing. And I have a lot of practice in me. Maybe someday when you are on the East coast I'll bring you to the track and give you a ride in the 10 sec. car you are in so much denial about. This, to show you not only what the beloved LS6 can do, but what a little know how can do to it.
I'll even let you get a picture of you behind the wheel so you can tell your buddies that it's yours.
....OH sorry was that an insult?
There's no need to reply to this post my blood pressure is high enough right now.
That is all for me...........
i got a crate and custom FI and dropped it into my lil 69 camaro RS...oh boy! the weight-horses ratio is a force on the street.Blew my rear again though
Okay, no more heavy sarcasm, just the facts. I'm looking at a Car Life test of a '70 LS6 Chevelle. Did the quarter in 14.55 @ 99.7. Coincidentally, the same magazine ran a '68 Ram Air I GTO through the quarter in 14.53 @ 99.77. Trap speed is a good indicator of hp. Yes, 3.31s held the LS6 back while 3.90s let the Ram Air get into its power band quicker, but the RA I made maybe 360 net hp and I don't see an extra 140 from the LS6.
When I hear 9s I think of the Pro Stockers I watched when I starting going to the strip in the early '70s. I dug out an old magazine, something called Hot Stock '72, to remind me what Pro Stock was all about then. Mid-high 9s at around 140, maybe 650 net hp and a legal vehicle weight of 3089 lbs. It took about $5000 in 1972 dollars to build a competitive Pro Stocker. They were heavily modified, and trailered to races.
Car Life's LS6 weighed 4196 lbs. You say your Chevelle weighs 3400+ lbs. so I guess you've lightened it a bit. It's still about 300 lbs. heavier than an early-70s Pro Stocker, but you're not claiming their consistent 9s, just very low 10s with an occasional 9. It still looks like you'd need around 650 net hp to get your Chevelle into the very low 10s. Plus the tires and suspension to hook up 650 net hp. Plus a drivetrain that can take that kind of abuse consistently.
So, an honest question: will $1100 do this for a 95% stock streetable Chevelle?
Ford's 427 Hemi of '64. Although advertised as having 425 HP, I still have an old car mag with an article that claims that a dynamometer indicated 610 HP with a single four barrel carburetor. The engine was only available for a short time, 2 or 3 months I think. I've been told some of these engines are still in use today in dragsters.
The New:
The Lexus V8. No further comment should be necessary.
Chevy small blocks asp. 283/327
MoPar big blocks
Chevy 427/454
Ford 427 side oiler
Ford 289/302
2001 BMW 330ci/E46, 2008 BMW 335i conv/E93
An 18 inch glasspack on one side and a straight pipe on the other side.
Go down a hill, put it in second and let out the clutch!