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HK1837 Offline
#61 Posted : Friday, 18 September 2015 4:17:04 PM(UTC)
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They are more believable when you see dyno charts with all environmental factors stated! And the net figures are stated how they were measured as well.
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Dr Terry Offline
#62 Posted : Friday, 18 September 2015 5:06:53 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: gm5735 Go to Quoted Post
While it might be academically amusing to compare BHP figures from that period, they are about as believable as the picture on a seed packet.


While I agree that the old SAE bhp figures are inflated, back in the day the various manufacturers offerings were at least directly comparable.

A 115 bhp 179 engine versus say a 210 bhp 307 V8 seemed in proportion as did the 300 bhp, 350 HT manual V8.

I don't believe they were any more rubbery than today, when comparing one engine with another.

Dr Terry
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castellan Offline
#63 Posted : Saturday, 19 September 2015 10:33:57 AM(UTC)
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As for modern day figures, one that comes to mind is the late VS sequential 5.0l V8 179 KW now this is related to DIN KW but the VT 5.0l is rated the same power ? but it just can not be so, because of the crappy single exhaust on the ute and the sedan gets a good twin exhaust.
I have driven both when they were new and the sedan out performs the ute for sure.

As for Net power figures Ford has this rating with 1976 F100's to go back and see in the days.
6 cyl 250 = 111 HP @ 3500RPM / Torque 206 LB @ 1600 RPM.
V8 302 2 barrel = 170 HP @ 4300 / 268 LB @ 2100 RPM Ambulance this had a Carter carby like the XB had.
V8 302 2 barrel = 134 HP @ 4000 now this is due to having the small ww2 Stromberg they had on them.

XB 351 2 barrel = 182 HP @ 4200 / 304 LB @ 2200 RPM.
XB 351 4 barrel = 214.6 HP @ 4400 / 301 LB @ 2900 RPM.
XB 302 2 barrel = 159.2 HP @ 4400 / 250.8 LB @ 2500 RPM.
HK1837 Offline
#64 Posted : Monday, 21 September 2015 9:28:54 AM(UTC)
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Anyone here have access to someone with a GMH assembled 1967 Impala or Parisienne with the 240hp 4BBL 327 in it still, wearing its original heads? Just looking for the casting number and/or the cast mark on the ends of the heads.
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Dr Terry Offline
#65 Posted : Monday, 21 September 2015 1:17:28 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: castellan Go to Quoted Post
As for modern day figures, one that comes to mind is the late VS sequential 5.0l V8 179 KW now this is related to DIN KW but the VT 5.0l is rated the same power ? but it just can not be so, because of the crappy single exhaust on the ute and the sedan gets a good twin exhaust.
I have driven both when they were new and the sedan out performs the ute for sure.


AFAIK the late VSIII sequential 5.0 V8 specs are for Statesman & Caprice, I have not seen any separate specs for the ute.

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HK1837 Offline
#66 Posted : Monday, 21 September 2015 2:10:03 PM(UTC)
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They are in the 1999/2000 VSIII utes sales brochure Terry, listed as either 179kW (STD) or 195kW (HBD). I have one at home from when I bought my VSIII in late 2000.
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Dr Terry Offline
#67 Posted : Monday, 21 September 2015 2:36:31 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: HK1837 Go to Quoted Post
They are in the 1999/2000 VSIII utes sales brochure Terry, listed as either 179kW (STD) or 195kW (HBD). I have one at home from when I bought my VSIII in late 2000.


I realise that. I worded my post wrongly. What I meant was that I have not seen different specs for the ute listed.

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HK1837 Offline
#68 Posted : Monday, 21 September 2015 3:04:36 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: Dr Terry Go to Quoted Post
Originally Posted by: HK1837 Go to Quoted Post
They are in the 1999/2000 VSIII utes sales brochure Terry, listed as either 179kW (STD) or 195kW (HBD). I have one at home from when I bought my VSIII in late 2000.


I realise that. I worded my post wrongly. What I meant was that I have not seen different specs for the ute listed.

Dr Terry


I get it now Terry, I misread what you meant!
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castellan Offline
#69 Posted : Monday, 21 September 2015 10:13:06 PM(UTC)
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The reason, is why or how could they get away with stating 179 KW for the ute, as it's quoted in DIN ? not ECE ? like we see Holden now uses, this shows the difference between single exhaust or twin.Think

The VSIII ute came with 168 KW this had a snorkel Drool and it made 2 KW more and then the sequential 179 KW came out.
I wonder if the sequential chip is the same in the 179 VS ute and VT 179 KW. I don't think it could be.Eh?
Dr Terry Offline
#70 Posted : Tuesday, 22 September 2015 8:15:37 AM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: castellan Go to Quoted Post
The reason, is why or how could they get away with stating 179 KW for the ute, as it's quoted in DIN ? not ECE ? like we see Holden now uses, this shows the difference between single exhaust or twin.Think


I don't believe this to be correct. DIN takes dual exhaust into account, as does SAE net. My understanding is that this is one of the main differences between net & gross.

Holden were quoting different figures for dual vs single exhaust, way back in the VB/VC/VH/WB days, before any use of ECE standards.

AFAIK the only difference between DIN & ECE net kW is the temperature, barometric pressure & humidity of the ambient air at the time of testing.

I think the true net KW figure for the VSIII with the XT9 motor was never published & the PR department just used the Statesman figure for convenience.

Originally Posted by: castellan Go to Quoted Post

I wonder if the sequential chip is the same in the 179 VS ute and VT 179 KW. I don't think it could be

The chips are the same for the VSIII 5.0 Statesman & Ute, CJYN for the auto & COYM for manual (ute only obviously). But the VT 5.0 are CJDN (auto) & CNPJ (man).

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HK1837 Offline
#71 Posted : Tuesday, 22 September 2015 10:19:42 AM(UTC)
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Terry, I don't think I've ever looked - did the VSIII sequential engines have dual O2 sensors like the VT?
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Dr Terry Offline
#72 Posted : Tuesday, 22 September 2015 10:41:24 AM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: HK1837 Go to Quoted Post
Terry, I don't think I've ever looked - did the VSIII sequential engines have dual O2 sensors like the VT?


All my listings show the same two O2 sensors for both the VSIII/XT9, as the VT 5.0.

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castellan Offline
#73 Posted : Tuesday, 22 September 2015 3:19:31 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: HK1837 Go to Quoted Post
Terry, I don't think I've ever looked - did the VSIII sequential engines have dual O2 sensors like the VT?


No the 5.0L sequential ute only has one 02 sensor.
The 195 KW Maloo runs a twin exhaust with just one 02 sensor.
HK1837 Offline
#74 Posted : Tuesday, 22 September 2015 3:22:17 PM(UTC)
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If that is true that explains the different Memcals, at least one reason for it anyway.
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castellan Offline
#75 Posted : Tuesday, 22 September 2015 3:28:15 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: Dr Terry Go to Quoted Post
Originally Posted by: HK1837 Go to Quoted Post
Terry, I don't think I've ever looked - did the VSIII sequential engines have dual O2 sensors like the VT?


All my listings show the same two O2 sensors for both the VSIII/XT9, as the VT 5.0.

Dr Terry


XT9 ? never heard it called that.
LB9 EFI V8 are called I thought.
HK1837 Offline
#76 Posted : Wednesday, 23 September 2015 12:06:17 PM(UTC)
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Guys
Just doing some work on the Tonawanda GTS327 and 1968 CKD Impala/Pontiac engine specs.

On paper (GMH material and US full size Chevy Engineering specs) these engines are identical in every way auto vs auto, manual vs manual (HK's sump and one side exhaust manifold aside). According to US and GMH specs these are 8.75:1 engines. According to the same sources the 1968 307 is 9:1 in the US and 8.75:1 here but aside fro GMH using the 327's distributor they are the same.

So i'm cleaning up some HK 307 (032) and 327 (290) heads to compare to see if I can explain the anomaly as these heads are both supposed to be 70cc heads (if you haven't already spotted it most of the claimed compression figures cannot be correct)(note that all these engines are flat top pistons, the only place you'll find dish tops in 1968 SBC is on the 8.25:1 high torque 307 (C40 truck) and 8:1 high torque 327 (C50-60 truck)).

I haven't got to the stage of ccing the 032 and 290 cast heads yet, but careful examination sees them apparently identical other than one thing (detailed a bit further below).

From what I understand for 1968 GM added the extra threaded sensor hole so the 291729x heads were created:

2917290 was a new 70cc head.
2917291 64cc replaced 3890462.
2917292 64cc was a higher performance 64cc head than the 291. Not much info on these.
3917293 75cc replaced 3876775 (3876775 appears to be the 1967 210hp 2BBL 327 head and also the 1967 240hp 4BBL 327 head).

For 1969 these heads were replaced with the same basic things except for accessory holes in the ends of the heads:

3927185 replaced 2917290 (this is the 1969 235hp 2BBL 327 head on this 9.0:1 engine).
3927186 replaced 2917291.
3927187 replaced 2917292.
3927188 replaced 3917293 (this is what we got on the McKinnon Industries 327 in later HK).

There were also a couple of other heads like 3947040/041 around the 1969 timeframe that appear almost identical to the 3927186 heads but have slightly smaller ports and don't get the traditional double hump cast marks - these are the heads on the Tonawanda HT GTS350 manual engines.

Back to the 307, GM created the 3911032 heads for the 1968 307, apparently replaced in 1969 by 3927185 heads. Why not just use the 3917290 heads? As I said looking at them, taking basic measurements of ports, chambers, valves etc they look physically identical. However when running my fingers up inside the ports and comparing to the 290 heads the 032 heads have a small casting lump on the roof of the ports not far from the manifold face. Basically in the same spot the 882 smog heads have a larger lump. Anyone hazard a guess as to why?? I have read the 882 heads had it added there to either slow down exhaust flow or the keep the heads hotter to reduce emissions or something like that. Maybe the 1968 307 needed this? The other possibility I guess is that all HK-HT 307's are McKinnon Industries build, whereas all HK-HG 4BBL engines other than the final HG engines are Tonawanda build (McKinnon didn't build 4BBL SBC engines until sometime later in 1969). It may well be that the 032 heads are the same thing as 290 but 032 is unique to McKinnon and 290 unique to Tonawanda (ignoring the Flint plant for the time being).

Back to the purpose of me doing all this. GM claim 9:1 for the L14 1968 307. GMH claim 8.75:1. CCing both heads to check they are both approx. 69-70cc will show that GMH were right, 8.75:1 will be spot on for the 307. As for the 327, it cannot be 8.75:1 with 69-70cc heads if the 307 is 8.75:1. It will be at least 9:1, just as GM state for the 1969 235hp 2BBL 327 wearing 3927185 70cc heads. I'm also hearing from some US sources that some of their 1968 250hp L73 327 engines have 3917293 75cc heads - this info matches almost spot on the Combustion Chamber size (head plus gasket plus deck clearance) stated for the 1968 L73 327, and would result in approx. 8.55:1 compression (as per the second type HK McKinnon engine with 188 heads) which as per normal would be rounded up by GM to the nearest 0.25:1 compression ratio of 8.75:1. Some more work needed here, but one possibility is that the test engines used for the Engineering documents (combustion chamber volume measurement dyno testing etc) were almost certainly Flint engines, and as stated before perhaps the 290 cast heads were unique to Tonawanda, so 250hp 327 engines from Tonawanda will be 9:1 and those from Flint may have the 293 heads and 8.55:1 (rounded to 8.75:1).

Will advise once I find more, although i'd be interested to hear what others think about the lumps in the 032 exhaust ports.
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gm5735 Offline
#77 Posted : Wednesday, 23 September 2015 10:30:41 PM(UTC)
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Byron, what are you using for gasket volume? The 307 and 327 used different gaskets, and there were both steel shim with raised bead type and composite types used.
The compressed gasket volume is a significant proportion of chamber volume and can account for up to 10% CR variation.
HK1837 Offline
#78 Posted : Thursday, 24 September 2015 7:12:35 AM(UTC)
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I'm not using gaskets. The Engineering specs state actual measured combustion chamber volumes, which includes the head chamber and the gasket and cylinder volume above the piston at TDC. This is the figure used in the formula:

CR = (X+Vc)/Vc. Where X is the swept volume of each cylinder (or the engine cuin/8), CR the compression ratio and Vc the CC volume.

If you plug into these figures the stated Vc and the cylinder swept volume (for a 327 is 4 x pi x 3.25 or 327/8)) you get the CR's stated in the Engineering specifications (or a number within 0.25:1 lower). Except for the 1968 L73 250hp figure. This can be found in 3 x locations and they are all the aame: 1968 Chevrolet full size, 1968 Chevelle and 1968 Trucks (El Camino).
The figure you get (around 8.55-8.6:1) for the L73 250hp 327 engine is correct if it has 75cc heads. But our 327 engines do not have 75cc heads, they are around 69-70cc.
Trouble is people in the USA are stating they get both 290 and 293 heads on these engines, the 0.5:1 point of compression between engines with these 2 x heads will make a significant difference to their peak power output especially running on Australian Super fuel rather than US regular fuel.

Doing the same thing for the 307 using the Engineering Specs shows 8.75:1.
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castellan Offline
#79 Posted : Thursday, 24 September 2015 8:15:09 AM(UTC)
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I think the reason we got the low compression 307 and 327 back in the day, was to do with our fuel, some places out of town did not have super fuel and the old dudes would not fork out for extra cost of the super.

I remember filling up some peoples cars around 50/50 standard and super because they could get away with that and not fork out as much.

What's the difference with the dizzy timing set up we got ? maybe she does not advance as much.

Remember Holden maxim compression ratios from the first FX was 6.8:1 in 1950 and then this went up to 6.8:1 in 1956 and then 7.0:1 in 1958 and then 7.25:1 in 1960 and then 8.8:1 in 1963 and 9.2:1 in 1966 and 10.25:1 in 1969.
This was all to do with the fuel that we had in Australia at the time I believe, across the whole nation as a fare thing for Holden to run on without stuffing the engines up.
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#80 Posted : Thursday, 24 September 2015 8:50:55 AM(UTC)
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Except for the HT-HG manual engines GMH actually specified significantly MORE (or the same for the HK's 327) centrifugal advance than GM did, as all the US engines (bar the 10.25:1 350's) were setup for 90-91 Octane Regular fuel. The 10.25:1 L48 engines in HT-HG were designed for 100 octane fuel in the US, we had 97 Octane or something below 90 so all these engines had to run on Super in Australia. GMH used the same specification distributor in all of them except maybe the last of the non-81837 HQ's and dialled in considerably more advance other than in the HK 327 and the HT-HG 350M - consequently GMH also claimed higher output figures for all of the engines as well other than for the HK 327 and HT-HG 350M engines where the total advance wasn't changed. The earlier auto HQ's got something like 10deg more advance than the exact same engine in the USA.
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