Originally Posted by: gm5735
It would be great if someone, somewhere, had a surviving tin of Balm full lead X2 Engine Red so it could be properly measured and matched. Until that happy day I think anything we do is an approximation, and only for a particular point in the age of the paint, which fades with time.
A mate has the old Dulux Color Advisory folders from the 60's and 70's.
These samples were painted with the real paint from back in the day and are usually accurate.
I reckon it'll be close to X2 and if it does match I'll go with my theory that X2 is actually the Chevy engine paint from the 1960's.
Just a theory.
Found this info on one forum:
The 1960-70's Chevy engine paint was listed as "Red Engine Enamel in the original GM specification drawings, it was never called Chevy orange by GM" (QUOTE - GM Tonawanda historian Art Casper)
Around 1975-6 chevy engines were painted blue, probably lead free.
Different paints for different plants?
The original enamel used by the Tonawanda engine plant was manufactured by Pratt & Lambert, just down the road from the Tonawanda plant.
McKinnon Industries in St.Catharines Ontatio Canada is a 40 minute drive from GM Tonawanda in New York state.
Both plants more than likely used the same engine enamel, other plants may have used something different.
Edited by user Monday, 6 November 2017 12:06:13 AM(UTC)
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