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rallystripes Offline
#1 Posted : Monday, 29 February 2016 6:53:30 PM(UTC)
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HT 80837

Original motor is long gone but have been told that was a 308.......In saying that,what are the tell tale signs that the car was built as a 308 or 253???

Car has Saginaw hump and has hump in rear floor and holes in the rear wheel arch that indicates tramp rods were once there.

Thanks for any input.
Devo Offline
#2 Posted : Monday, 29 February 2016 7:03:07 PM(UTC)
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I'm interested in the replies for this one. I also have the fuel tank hump but interested in knowing what else visually confirms a 308 outside of the ID plates.
HK1837 Offline
#3 Posted : Monday, 29 February 2016 8:23:02 PM(UTC)
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HT is pretty easy for GTS. 10-bolt rear axle hump is 307 or 308 and up. Banjo on V8 GTS means 253. Picking the gearbox on a V8 GTS is easy too, only the three options and the Saginaw linkage clearance hump gives you the manual. Trimatic and Powerglide you pick by the speedo cable hole. The rarest combination (ignoring the 1 known 307 manual) is probably a toss up between 308 manual and 307 (auto only), probably both close GTS350 in build numbers or less for either one. All assuming the body and tags are original together and unmodified.

Edited by user Monday, 29 February 2016 8:26:50 PM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

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Ausjacko Offline
#4 Posted : Monday, 29 February 2016 9:47:19 PM(UTC)
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Were all engine bays on the HT GTS painted black? Reason I ask is that the PO of mine painted the whole car black (that has since peeled off-mostly) but the engine bay is a light green colour. PO states he did not paint it that colour and I have no reason to doubt him. Stripping has not revealed any sub layers. Just curious and not suggesting it means something special.
Cheers
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HK1837 Offline
#5 Posted : Tuesday, 1 March 2016 5:53:49 AM(UTC)
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Probably the slops/slush black paint used had a large amount of green in it when it was painted. It can vary. GTS was meant to be gloss Warrigal, but I and others have seen some of them in slops/slush black on the firewall.

Edited by user Tuesday, 1 March 2016 9:30:38 AM(UTC)  | Reason: Tuxedo fixed to Warrigal

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If we all had the same (good) taste, who would buy all the Fords?
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Ausjacko on 1/03/2016(UTC)
gm5735 Offline
#6 Posted : Tuesday, 1 March 2016 8:45:19 AM(UTC)
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If you didn't find any other layers, it's been repainted. You should have black etch primer, then red oxide primer, then Warrigal Black gloss (not Tuxedo Black for HKTG). As Byron noted, some GTS cars are known to not follow the paint spec and ended up with slush black on the Firewall and inner fenders.
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Ausjacko on 1/03/2016(UTC)
HK1837 Offline
#7 Posted : Tuesday, 1 March 2016 9:28:00 AM(UTC)
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Correct, Warrigal. I should never type in a hurry! Too many hours spent on Sandman text has Tuxedo ingrained into my head. I've edited the prior post to fix it.
I'd also have thought Geoff you'd find body dip black under the red oxide. Same cr@p that Dandenong body tags get covered with.
What must have been somewhat embarrassing for salesmen was when you opened the bonnet on some cars and had slush black on the firewall and satin/semigloss black on the inner guards and radiator support. I've seen lots of HQ's like this. Also seen them with gloss body colour firewalls and slush or stain black on the inner guards and radiator support. Must have been a nightmare for dealerships when you had a combination of Pagewood, Dandenong and Elizabeth and sometime Acacia Ridge assembled vehicles all side by side at a dealership with different under bonnet treatments, and throw into the mix vans and tonners with Pagewood or Dandenong assembly plant paint but Elizabeth firewall paint treatment.

Edited by user Tuesday, 1 March 2016 9:36:03 AM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

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If we all had the same (good) taste, who would buy all the Fords?
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Ausjacko on 1/03/2016(UTC)
Ausjacko Offline
#8 Posted : Tuesday, 1 March 2016 10:48:45 AM(UTC)
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thanks fellas, appreciate the info.
gm5735 Offline
#9 Posted : Tuesday, 1 March 2016 10:49:38 AM(UTC)
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Quote:
What must have been somewhat embarrassing for salesmen was when you opened the bonnet on some cars and had slush black on the firewall and satin/semigloss black on the inner guards and radiator support.


Byron, I couldn't agree more. There are lots of variations. Only GTS and Brougham (so called "Premium models") were supposed to get the gloss black treatment, but I've seen it on Premiers as well.


One day I'll start a new thread for this. One day.

I don't think HKTG were dipped at all. I've discussed this with Ben, and he isn't sure either. We know at least some HQs were, from this photo:



Which explains why the cowls rust so comprehensively, above the high tide mark.

The HKTG paint spec, as told to me by Ben is:

1/ Black etch primer over all the bare steel on the entire body shell.
2/ Red oxide primer over the black etch
3/ Body colour acrylic lacquer over the red oxide
4/ Black primer (375-1690) or black acrylic lacquer (599-5285) on the undersides of the wheelhouses, and mostly the underside of the car.
5/ Black acrylic lacquer (599-5285) on the firewall - except for GTS and Brougham and maybe Premier
6/ Black acrylic lacquer (599-5285) on the front subframe,
7/ Black acrylic lacquer (599-5285) on the front fender undersides,
8/ Warrigal Black acrylic lacquer in engine compartment and firewall for GTS, Brougham and maybe Premier.
This lacquer is gloss by definition, but was baked and not buffed, which is why the finish varies in gloss level so much.

Here's a photo of a partial strip of the front spring hanger from a Dandenong Verdoro Green HT, almost the lowest point of the body shell:



You can quite clearly see the layers, exactly as described in the spec. I see no evidence of a dipping process. There are also many semi open box sections on the underside of the car which have no evidence of paint inside them. Presumably if they were dipped there would be some.
What I have seen slathered around the shell is the seam sealer - Elastite, which is a sticky black caulking compound full of asbestos. It looks like it has been applied with a trowel.

Edited by user Tuesday, 1 March 2016 10:54:54 AM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

HK1837 Offline
#10 Posted : Tuesday, 1 March 2016 12:00:52 PM(UTC)
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Interesting, I've never paid huge attention to HK-HG in this specific area (ie body dipping). That photo of the W size Holden sedan going through a body dip pretty much reflects the drawing of what is dipped in the HJ-HZ Features Manuals. Dandenong HQ onwards Holden and LH-UC Torana body plates are often caked with the dip (as they went on with one rivet when the bodies were bare steel) so the actual dipping process must be slightly different at different body plants. The reason for the rust in the corners of W Holden and Statesman cowl is it is double steel close together and there is black sealant between the upper and lower cowl when they were put together - so even submerging it would see none get in there. Front doors are similar - there is a barrier inside the door so that no or minimal paint or dip gets into the front portion of the door and they rusted out in no time. LX hatchback quarter and outer upper quarter are the same. When you look at new HK-HG coupe sills and gow the quarters fit over the back of those you get a similar double steel area with no way to put any protectant in there especially after heating and lead wiping burns off any protective coating the steel may have had.
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gm5735 Offline
#11 Posted : Tuesday, 1 March 2016 7:29:27 PM(UTC)
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Yes, and the design of the HKTG creates a vulnerable pocket with no drain hole for when the quarter windows inevitably leak, rotting out the rear or the floor pan, and the front of the inner fender, and then the sill and rear quarter. Not to mention the wadding under the quarter window.

You will notice that Holden made a big deal about dipping the body shell in the HQ Sales literature below.
Happy to be proved wrong, but I think this is the first time Holden made any mention of a dipping process.

At that time there was considerable pressure on the manufacturers in the US regarding lack of corrosion protection, as part of Ralph Naders' next onslaught after the grandstanding over the Corvair issues.

Perhaps that influenced the GMH emphasis.





400bowtie Offline
#12 Posted : Tuesday, 1 March 2016 7:53:25 PM(UTC)
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are you sure it' not a South Africa car or front if it's original paint in engine bay?
The difference between good and great is the extra effort
HK1837 Offline
#13 Posted : Tuesday, 1 March 2016 7:58:41 PM(UTC)
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No. Some Aussie assembled HQ had gloss body colour on the firewalls. From memory Pagewood and Dandenong for an approx. 12 month period ending mid-ish 1974. I have plenty of photos of Survivor cars and tried to nail it down in the past but never went too far with it.
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If we all had the same (good) taste, who would buy all the Fords?
400bowtie Offline
#14 Posted : Tuesday, 1 March 2016 8:05:55 PM(UTC)
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i read it as HT 80837 Bryon
The difference between good and great is the extra effort
HK1837 Offline
#15 Posted : Tuesday, 1 March 2016 8:15:01 PM(UTC)
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Sorry mate, I thought you were replying to my mention of coloured paint in post 7, my bad. Carry on.

Edited by user Tuesday, 1 March 2016 8:16:35 PM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

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If we all had the same (good) taste, who would buy all the Fords?
400bowtie Offline
#16 Posted : Tuesday, 1 March 2016 8:23:40 PM(UTC)
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So what the chance ? HT 308,Sag . 10 bolt painted engine bay ( if original) what tags are on the car ?
The difference between good and great is the extra effort
rallystripes Offline
#17 Posted : Tuesday, 1 March 2016 9:41:11 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: 400bowtie Go to Quoted Post
So what the chance ? HT 308,Sag . 10 bolt painted engine bay ( if original) what tags are on the car ?



......Car has been confirmed as a factory 308 4 speed car with 10 bolt diff.......engine by was black as per factory...all tags are on the car and all look above board....

detective Offline
#18 Posted : Wednesday, 2 March 2016 3:16:28 PM(UTC)
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...I can vouch for the slush black on two accounts .. The first is when I had the engine out of my 1971 HQ GTS350 back in about 1980. While the front clip was off I decided to polish/clean the firewall and thought the paint was a bit funny looking for Black...It seemed to have a Brownish hue in the right light ??

...Fast Forward a few years and owning a truck painting shop (still do !), I realised a great way to get rid of unwanted enamel slops laying around and taking up space in the paint locker was to occassionally do a "slops stocktake", mix all the unwanted paint into a muddy hue, and feed it into the black we used for chassis', under mudguards, tyres, tool box lockers etc., etc....anything that didn't require a high/higher quality appearance. This procedure is still carried out in my shop today.....It's an efficient way of getting rid of unwanted/old product on "second line" vehicles.

Edited by user Wednesday, 2 March 2016 3:18:19 PM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

Shearer Offline
#19 Posted : Thursday, 3 March 2016 5:50:11 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: HK1837 Go to Quoted Post
No. Some Aussie assembled HQ had gloss body colour on the firewalls. From memory Pagewood and Dandenong for an approx. 12 month period ending mid-ish 1974. I have plenty of photos of Survivor cars and tried to nail it down in the past but never went too far with it.


http://www.ebay.com.au/i...3D6%26sd%3D222033246139

Like this one?
HK1837 Offline
#20 Posted : Thursday, 3 March 2016 6:49:35 PM(UTC)
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That's one, an obvious Pagewood body too.
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If we all had the same (good) taste, who would buy all the Fords?
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