Originally Posted by: HK1837 They had to be painted here, remember some plants painted them and some didn't. Same with the HK-HG M20 4spd. I have personally pulled apart untouched 253 M21 HT or HG and the boxes were raw, and a lot of Dandenong V8 HK cars have turned up the same. Yet Pagewood looks to have painted the box once attached to the bellhousing.
Smitty will attest to a lot of this as he worked for GMH. All engines, all boxes came from the same source in Australia. Same with all mechanical parts. All imported stuff came through the same source within Australia. Even the paint came from the single origin. The whole notion people have come up with the years that BAP and VAP sourced stuff locally is just fiction. GMH appropriated everything under single contracts for economy of scale reasons. The stuff they built themselves was either built in the Victorian engine plant or made/assembled (or pressed) at Woodville, plus a number of other smaller facilities. Anything they cast came from their one foundry location. Anything they bought in from Australian suppliers was all sourced from the one supply source by whomever had the contract at that time. BAP's and VAP's simply put it all together, with the logistics looked after by head office. All the local plants had to do was supply power, labour, air, water and natural gas. They didn't press anything, they didn't really fabricate anything other than sew up trim in the local trim shop. Everything was supplied to the VAP's as dictated by the schedule and it was all send either from Woodville or Fisherman's bend. I know this is in broad terms, and there will have been variations where it made sense (like if the supplier was in Sydney or Brisbane they may have sent the required bits directly rather than ship to South Australia or Victoria and back again).
As for BAP and VAP variations in how they did things, well it will simply be a combination of the age of the plant and historical reasons. You can see in that Camaro article that Van Nuys and Norwood did the chassis to body join differently. I saw similar variations between BHP Newcastle and BHP Kembla in how they operated their BOS - it was simply an age and historical difference. In HK you see it in when and where the tags were attached in the build process. Or how Pagewood and Dandenong painted the front panels with the body in the BAP, whereas Elizabeth painted the front panels in the VAP. Remember Pagewood was the oldest plant by the time HK came around, and they kept following their old established ways. Whereas Acacia Ridge was brand new and built very differently to the others. This was the 60's. Communication was by phone or Telex or post. You can fly to Singapore from Sydney today faster than you could have driven to Melbourne in 1968. The Internet wasn't even made public until 1969, and the World Wide Web that people incorrectly call the Internet today didn't exist until 1991 and not really used to much extent until the later 90's. Co-ordination of production schedule and thus inventory to meet that schedule was done by mainframe and mainframe access communicating via low speed modems. So there was no real means to make all VAP locations do things identically, and there was little reason to do so. In the capital cities most cars would be sourced locally, and 99% of people would never notice that this car had a painted body tag but that one is nude, or that GTS327 has a raw gearbox but this one is painted. Once the cars were 12 months old and out of warranty GMH didn't give a damn, the only money they would make out of the cars after that was to supply parts for another few years and get a kickback from GMH dealer licencing.
basically yeah HK.... all of that
Pagewood tended to do their own thing, even VD Commodore build plates on VC bodies (true!)
but
back on topic... basic manufacturing in Australia was done in 2 places , Mechanical (Engines, diffs etc) at FBend and
body stamping and misc ( Interior Trim, Trimatics etc) at Woodville
VAPs (vehicle assembly plants) did just that .. assemble vehicles. Even CKD Bedfords, Chevs and then Isuzus from large
boxes. they did not paint wheels or engines or suspensions, they were used as received from the external supplier or GM/GMH plant of supply
They did paint bodywork and some hard trim
The paint? GMH had a contract with Dulux (had for years) and they supplied what was on the paint supplies chart for each particular model
(see pic )
Imported GM stuff (say varajet from France or Quaddie carbs, T350s from the US etc) all got delivered by the Australian
import agent/shipper GMH used to where they were needed in my day
apologies if this pic is not super clear, it is a piece of paper dating back to 1979!
ps... I learnt to type on TELEX machines there and I kill keyboards these days as a result