Be careful of brochures. The original Engineering docs in the GM Heritage archives are better info. They list the 1972 Nova as:
307 130hp@4400rpm, 235lbft@2400rpm net, 8.5:1 (they have used 75cc heads here to drop compression, earlier 307 were 69cc chambers).
350 L65 is as you have typed
350 L48 210hp@4400rpm, 300ftlb@2800rpm net also 8.5
The L65 and L48 are the same engine bar the inlet and carby, other than the L48 has less total advance and less vacuum advance (L65 and 307 use the same dizzy).
307 and L65 use a single 2" system with single muffler and 2" tailpipes. L48 has a dual 2.25" system with single muffler and 2" tailpipes.
The 1971 L48 is actually a pivot engine as it is the only year that the engines were properly rated as both gross and net and for auto and manual. Here it is:
270hp@4800, 360ftlb@3200 gross
210hp@4400, 300ftlb@2800 net (manual)
175hp@4000, 290@2400ftlb net (auto)
These net figures at not "in-car", they are still done on an engine dyno but simulated as in a vehicle - this is a GM20 test IIRC.
1971 L48 is our HQ 350 manual engine, and the earlier auto 350 engine except again for carby, exhaust manifolds and distributer - our engines got far more advance for Super fuel.
1972 is net only and rated as manual only that I could ever find, only difference is 200hp rather than 210. This 1972 engine we really only got in auto HQ but I think some snuck into manuals (remember the US 1972 engine production started in 8/71).
1973 is net only and auto only, same rated power as 1971 auto figure but torque 260ftlb@2800. We only got this engine in auto 350 but again different carb and our dizzy hanged to the US L48 manual dizzy, so again more spark advance than the US vehicles.
1974 L48 actually increased in power, 185hp@4000 and 270ftlb@2600. We got this engine from 8/73 in auto HQ, except we got the 1972 L48 dizzy again and also got the 1972 L48 carby.
That 327 in the GMC is essentially the same engine in the HK GTS327 engine, minus the HD stuff like valve rotators etc.
1970 Camaro 2 barrel 9:1 is the 1969-70 L65 engine. It replaced the LM1 at the end of 12/68 in 1969 model year. The Camaro LM1 is our HT-HG GTS350 auto engine, other than the sump, carby, dizzy and exhaust manifolds (sump is obvious, we got a 1967 tune carby as from 1968 in the USA they had AIR across the board, our engine used the 327's dizzy for more advance as it ran on Super in Australia, and Camaro used log manifolds not ramshorns). The L65 in the USA is the same engine as the US LM1 other than the inlet and carby.
Correct, the HT GTS350 manual engine is the US 1969-1970 L48, again except for sump, carby, dizzy and exhaust manifolds.
The 1970 Z28 is 370hp in a Corvette, 360hp in a Camaro (exhaust manifolds account for the 10hp less). That is the weapon SBC, it is what Harry Firth wanted for Old Man Emu, his Bathurst HG GTS. A Phase3 would have trouble keeping up with one of those! It was canned due to cost as one factor, as it would have required an M22 Muncie and 12 bolt rear axle plus by the time it would have went into production the 1970 Z28 engine would be wrapping up (finished 7/70) and HG GTS350 itself wound up before the end of 1970 calendar year.
Edited by user Thursday, 7 December 2017 4:08:32 PM(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified