Originally Posted by: HK1837 You can't really compare many of those engines as the ratings are all over the place, some are SE gross, some are net. It gets really painful to try and figure some of it out.
The 307 was never meant to be a performance engine. When it was introduced in about August 1967 it replaced the 283 which was only a 2BBL low comp engine by that stage. At the same time GM had:
307 2BBL 200hp (69-70cc heads. Code L14).
327 2BBL 210hp (standard V8 Camaro engine 75cc heads. Code LF7).
327 4BBL 250hp (standard 4BBL V8 in full size, what we got here in 1968 Impala and Parisienne and GTS327, same heads as 307, Code L73).
327 4BBL 275hp (same engine as 250hp but with 291 or 040 fuelie heads. Code L30).
350 4BBL 295hp (L48 engine, 1968 version of the HT GTS350 engine, same engine as L30 but 3.48" stroke rather than 3.25").
There were the high performance 302 (Z28) and 327 (L79) as well but that was it.
The 307 eventually replaced the 210hp 327 in Camaro as the standard V8 late in 1968, a few months into 1969 model year. This was a 1969 307 though so it had different heads to the HK 307 and the block was revised a bit too.
So all GMH did was use the 307 as GM intended, as a 2BBL base spec V8 engine. The only reason they used it was the planned 283 was cancelled before HK release. There have been GMH documents found with a code for a 4BBL 307 but no such thing was ever made by GM as a regular production engine. The 327 as used by GMH in the GTS327 was simply the next engine up and the logical choice as there would have been little point in a 2BBL 327, it really made no more power than the 307 already used in HK. Remember GMH rated the 307 at 210hp and probably rightly so as it had more timing than the US 307 and was to be run on Super fuel. It was also 8.75:1 compression, the 2BBL 327 was about 8.5:1 courtesy of its 75cc heads although it did get a compression bump for 1969 model year to 9:1 as the heads were switched to the same specification heads (69-70cc) as the 307 and the 4BBL 250hp 327.
Having said all that a 307 dressed with a 4BBL 327 intake and carby goes pretty well given a dual exhaust. It was a pretty common mod in the day. The HK 307 in that form is identical to a GTS327 engine other than the 1/8" bore difference. Same heads, same cam, same dizzy, same exhaust manifolds, same crank and rods. All you'd see is a few less hp due to the 20ci difference, plus the 307 loses 0.25:1 or so in compression due to the slightly less swept volume of the piston. Many people bored them straight to 4" at rebuild anyway, and then they are identical to the 327 at that stage, although I couldn't count on my fingers how many I've found also sporting 350 crankshafts too. I have one in my shed that was running at +4.030 for long enough to make a lip, and I had one in my FJ40 'cruiser at 4", plus my mate's HK 307 was out to 4.040" pulling 450hp for over 20 years until a rod bolt let go.
Them first 1974 figures are all Net HP and the 1978 were maybe DIN but regardless it shows relation ship to all in the year and non were the Gross figures that are totally useless in reality.
Having a 327 and going out and wanting to be using a 307 is like having a 186 and wanting to be using a 161.
I think that Australia had Super at 97 RON back in 1967 but I think that Holden did not want to have such as 10.25:1 until 1969.
I asked my dad about such octanes but he sold both fuel stations back in 1963 and could not remember such as the rating. he had a new 1955 customline and said he ran on Standard up and around Toowoomba and coming down to Brisbane she would ping and as such had to use the Super.
A HK GTS327 with 10:1 would of got along much better than that low comp crap that they came out with.
Look at the XT GT that came out in 4/1968 with about 9.8:1 I think. and then one had to wait until the HK GTS327 Monaro came out.
So Australia only has a good performing car staring in 5/1967 with the XR GT, sure the 289 V8 Fairmont from 9/1967 was the start of a good Aussie car, one could look to the Valiant 273 v8 but it only had drum brakes.
You had to wait till 2/1968 for a 307 HK and then 9/1968 for a GTS 327.
Or if you wanted a big GMH tank they only came with up to 327 with a 2sp auto and no disc brakes, but Ford had the big Galaxie 390 v8 3 sp auto from 1964 on and disc brakes from about 1970 I think, as the 1969 year model only came out in 2/1970 hear.
So the first real Australian made real drivers car was the XR v8 Falcon that one could point back to and say hey ! no one could hang shit on that back in the day.
1965 HD 179 X2 well it had disc but crap non syn 1st box and only 2 sp auto box, so no big deal, but HR 4SP 186S now that's not that bad and is full synch box so at least you can drive it and have fun from only late 1967.
8/1967 VE 226 2 BBL 160HP 3SP full synchromesh and 3sp auto and the big 273 V8 auto and they had disc brakes, not to mention the VIP came out before the HK Brougham.