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Dr Terry Offline
#101 Posted : Thursday, 3 August 2017 12:06:23 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: HK1837 Go to Quoted Post
Terry, I read that Moffat's 1977 car was an XB built from a body in white after his transporter and XA coupe burnt to the ground, but Bond's 1977 car was built from a an XC GS.


Isn't it funny how we are talking Fords now !

By my reckoning an XC body shell is identified by horizontal blinker repeaters in the rear guards, while the XA/XB shell had them vertical. As I understand it, in typical Ford production line fashion the last few months of XB production also had the (XC style) horizontal lights.

Anyway, I always thought that the Moffat cars were XBs with an XC front clip, but I had a closer look at some photos from the era & guess what.

It appears that Moffat's car was a 'new' XC shell, while Bond had what appears to be an XA/XB shell.

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HK1837 Offline
#102 Posted : Thursday, 3 August 2017 12:40:39 PM(UTC)
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If that's the case then the source I read it from got it back to front, Moffat must have got the XC GS based shell and Bond's was Moffat's old XB.
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Dr Terry Offline
#103 Posted : Thursday, 3 August 2017 3:28:50 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: HK1837 Go to Quoted Post
If that's the case then the source I read it from got it back to front, Moffat must have got the XC GS based shell and Bond's was Moffat's old XB.


That would make sense, you would think that the lead driver & team owner (Moffat) would get the 'new' car, while the 2nd driver (Bond) would get the older hand-me-down.

Brock did the same thing, with he getting the new car each year & John Harvey often getting last year's hand-me-down.

Dr Terry

Edited by user Thursday, 3 August 2017 3:35:01 PM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

If at first you don't succeed, just call it Version 1.0
castellan Offline
#104 Posted : Thursday, 3 August 2017 9:40:43 PM(UTC)
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Now I remember on a Ford forum something about claiming a myth, that the Holden red 6 cyl was better than the Falcon 6 cyl.

I remember many a time reading that the Ford 302 Cleveland is better than a 308 Holden V8, that's not a myth that's BS.

Not to mention the myth of the Chev 307 being better than a Holden 308.
HK1837 Offline
#105 Posted : Thursday, 3 August 2017 10:01:46 PM(UTC)
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If you put a 4BBL on a 307 and give it the 327's exhaust (which you could actually option) I'd back the 307!
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gm5735 Offline
#106 Posted : Thursday, 3 August 2017 11:11:50 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: HK1837 Go to Quoted Post
If you put a 4BBL on a 307 and give it the 327's exhaust (which you could actually option) I'd back the 307!


If we're talking HKTG I'd take that bet. The 308 twin system is far less restrictive than the HK327 system.
HK1837 Offline
#107 Posted : Friday, 4 August 2017 7:03:41 AM(UTC)
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^^Sounds like another myth to me! It doesn't restrict the GTS327 all that bad. Two road tests of two properly tuned GTS327's by different sources in 1968 returned the following:

0-100mph in 19.8s with 128.5mph top speed (corrected). 1/4 mile in 15.4s @ 92mph. and

0-100mph in 20.8s with 122.3mph top speed (indicated). 1/4 mile in 15.6s @ 89mph.

Which indicated to me the exhaust system on the GTS327 is easily good enough for the 327, so would not be restrictive on the 307. If the 307 was given the inlet, carb and air cleaner off the 327 with the same exhaust i'd expect figures only slightly slower than the above. Engines have identical heads and camshaft.
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wbute Offline
#108 Posted : Friday, 4 August 2017 7:16:24 AM(UTC)
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Is a 327 a stroked 307?
Dr Terry Offline
#109 Posted : Friday, 4 August 2017 7:34:35 AM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: wbute Go to Quoted Post
Is a 327 a stroked 307?


No, they share the same stroke. The 307 has a 3.875-inch bore while the 327's bore is 4.00-inches.

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HK1837 Offline
#110 Posted : Friday, 4 August 2017 7:46:30 AM(UTC)
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307 is a stroked 283, then 327 bored 307 and 350 a stroked 327.
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wbute Offline
#111 Posted : Friday, 4 August 2017 8:43:07 AM(UTC)
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Thanks.
gm5735 Offline
#112 Posted : Friday, 4 August 2017 11:05:13 AM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: HK1837 Go to Quoted Post
^^Sounds like another myth to me! It doesn't restrict the GTS327 all that bad. Two road tests of two properly tuned GTS327's by different sources in 1968 returned the following:

0-100mph in 19.8s with 128.5mph top speed (corrected). 1/4 mile in 15.4s @ 92mph. and

0-100mph in 20.8s with 122.3mph top speed (indicated). 1/4 mile in 15.6s @ 89mph.

Which indicated to me the exhaust system on the GTS327 is easily good enough for the 327, so would not be restrictive on the 307. If the 307 was given the inlet, carb and air cleaner off the 327 with the same exhaust i'd expect figures only slightly slower than the above. Engines have identical heads and camshaft.


The only myth is that of a 4 barrel 307!
The GTS327 resonators are triple pass - exhaust gas flows the length of the resonator 3 times before exiting. The GTS350 (and 308) resonators are straight through and far less restrictive which would be why they were changed for HT.

The 307 doesn't breathe as well as a 327 due to internal geometry. The valves are restricted due to the smaller bore, regardless of inlet manifold and carburettor.
HK1837 Offline
#113 Posted : Friday, 4 August 2017 11:39:54 AM(UTC)
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Might be so but a 4BBL 307 with N10 exhaust goes almost as hard as a 327, only slightly slower. There were tests done on these when new, can't recall where.
307 valves (and GTS327 valves) are actually 283 valves. If the smaller bore of a 307 affected the flow of the 1.72" inlets then fitting 2.02/1.6 valves to a 4" bore would be going backwards in power and torque compared to 1.94/1.5, which isn't the case. And L34's would be going backwards too which they aren't.

Edit - Geoff, there was a code in the original GMH literature for what we think may have been a 4BBL 307, L?? - can't remember what it was.

Also 327 with same 2BBL carb and manifold as the 307 was a 210hp engine, whereas our 307 was rated 200hp in the USA (it was rated 210hp here, we think due to rating on Super fuel and more advance as our 307 used the 327's dizzy). That same 327 with 4BBL carb and manifold was rated at 240hp, and raised to 250hp when the heads changed to 69-70cc heads in 1968 (was 75cc heads in 1967, but changed to 307 70cc heads in 1968). So you'd expect if our 307 is 210hp that it'd go close to 240hp with the same inlet and carb. Even if it was only 230-235hp, it is still above the real figure of a stock HT 308 which is (on GMH's dyno) 226hp @4800rpm, 300ftlb @3200rpm. GMH upped these by 14hp and 15ftlb.

Edited by user Friday, 4 August 2017 2:33:53 PM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

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castellan Offline
#114 Posted : Friday, 4 August 2017 2:53:51 PM(UTC)
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I have proven it that my 308 a stock reco out to 0.030 and a mates 307 stock reco 0.030 over, same diff ratio, my M21 and his sag and both same carby and air filter, both extractors and twin system and both P vans.
My 308 killed his 307 and he could not believe it.
Another mate with a HK Monaro with a 283 0.060 over Chev in it and then put in a 307 0.060 over and still could not do my old 308 over and I said to him do you want to have a go at my SL/R5000 after I took him for a drive in that, he said Nup !

I have always regarded them old 327's as the best chev engine and the 350 can be good, the 400 is rubbish and the 283 is good but just a bit too small and the old 305 was a racing weapon.

With Fords GT 289 and GT 302 Windsor and 351 Cleveland was the best 351 and the 302 Cleveland was gutless rubbish as was the old 6 cyl crap.

With Valiant's 245 2BBL and 265 and the 340 V8 were the best and the 318 and 360 were gutless rubbish as was the 215 hemi.

A standard 307 HK vs a 327 GTS Monaro has no chance at all, even with GTS exhaust.
Even a 307 with a 4BBL vs a 327 would be like a Holden 173 vs 186.
HK1837 Offline
#115 Posted : Friday, 4 August 2017 4:16:49 PM(UTC)
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The fairest comparison would be a stock 202 in a HG versus a stock 186 in a HG, same gearbox, same exhaust, same everything.

If you change the inlet and carb on a 307 4spd HK GTS ordered with N10 exhaust the only difference between that car and a GTS327 driveline wise is the extra 1/8" bore. That is 6.5% more cubic capacity and thus a compression rise from 8.75 to 9.x:1. According to GM the 327 going from 4BBL to the 2 barrel loses 30hp, and i'd expct it to be similar (like 25-30hp) on the 307 going up to the 4BBL.

On a similar story my mate had a HQ 1-tonner with Aussie M21 and 3.36 diff. It had a dead stock 307 in it pulled from an old Premier. He stuck some old 462 fuellies on it and a standard HK 4BBL and Quadrajet. Admittedly it had the bigger heads (worth 25hp on a 327), but it went like stink. Used to pull like a train, was infinitely better than an 308 I've ever driven. Sure the 308 probably revved harder, but outright balls this thing was unbelievable for what it was. You could pull out and overtake a semi uphill with a car float and a full HK on the trailer and it'd feel like it was going to launch itself. I had similar experience with my old FJ40 with a HT 307 in it, standard engine down to the carby and there is no way a stock 308 would pull like that old 307 used to. You must have had a bigger cam in that HQ, bigger than the stock 253 cam anyway!
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bazza30555 Offline
#116 Posted : Friday, 4 August 2017 5:46:17 PM(UTC)
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Super Chev web site
Used 307 quadrajet, vintage edelbrock inlet, points ignition, stock cylinder heads, stock bore and same pistons GM installed in 1968, bit hotter cam
230Hp/5000rpm,278 lbft 4000rpm
possible had extractors when on dyno
Not bad for a worn old 307
HK1837 Offline
#117 Posted : Friday, 4 August 2017 6:44:59 PM(UTC)
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http://www.superchevy.co...evy-engine-performance/

It was a 37 year old engine when they did it too with 37 year old pistons and rings! The extractors on the dyno is normal - an SAE Gross test uses dyno exhaust
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KBM Offline
#118 Posted : Friday, 4 August 2017 7:07:29 PM(UTC)
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my FJ75 has recently been upgraded from a red 253 that was out of my old HT wagon to a blue 308 out of a WB statesman that's been rebuilt and only upgrade is a cam to suit straight gas. the same gas research system on both motors. I wish I rebuilt the 253. on flat ground the 308's fine, and so was the 253, but when you hit the hill it's crap. the 253 out performed the 308 easily. My standard 307 wagon is much better than the 308 up the same hill, except for the sharp corner where the powerglide doesn't kick down and takes a bit of time to reach 90kms again but it's only got a two barrel. the hill is my way home every day and in 8kms rises about 600m.
HK1837 Offline
#119 Posted : Friday, 4 August 2017 7:57:38 PM(UTC)
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You have to be careful of 253 and 308 in 'cruisers if you use the original Holden flywheel. Rod Hadfield told me many years ago that a Holden V8 in a 'cruiser was a waste of time, and it was especially noticeable in a 308 up hills, as the 'cruiser needs an 11" flywheel. From memory he said the 308 displayed it worse as it went better normally where you used the engine's power and torque wasn't as important but he reckoned it was that noticeable up hills and in 4wd that most people wished they'd left the 4.2L petrol engine in it. Old memory but his opinion was you'd be better off with a 283 or 305 or 307 or 302 SBC or alternatively a Falcon 6cyl, all with 11" Flywheel.

If you want to fix the FJ75, Marks 4WD do an 11" Flywheel for the 304/308 now. You'll need a new clutch too, but I think your bellhousing will be OK as it probably suits a SBC if it has provision to be drilled for TH pattern. 11" clutch will be a SBC 11" pressure plate and Landcruiser clutch plate.
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KBM Offline
#120 Posted : Saturday, 5 August 2017 9:06:09 AM(UTC)
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Thanks Byron, I think?. Wish I knew that before I put all the money into the 308. At least I now know it isn't the way I put it together as I was suspecting. I'll have a look at the 11" clutch and see if the boss allows it in the budget.
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