Originally Posted by: HK1837 I didn't work like that. Dealers were trained using a GMH training course to sell from stock. They didn't want you to order a car, they wanted to sell you firstly what they had in their own stock. Secondly sell you what was built but not yet allocated to a dealer. Thirdly, sell you off the production schedule. Lastly, place a retail order. Probably 90% of people who went to a dealer thinking they were placing an order were just being sold a car that either existed (as in belonged to Sales) or was in the schedule to be built (belonged to Production). The dealer would have asked what you wanted, as in do you want a 6cyl or a V8? What colour? Will see what we can get. I went through this exact process with my VY SS ute. I went in to order a white manual with black leather trim. They tried to sell me a red auto with standard trim really cheap as it was on the yard. Then tried cars other dealers or off the schedule. Then reluctantly placed a Retail order as it wasn't a car Holden built as a stock order. It took 5 months to get, and they were even less happy with the sale as it was a National Fleet order so it was at a big discount.
Its not just the 173 or 202 that made them "bad" by today's standards, as a driver's car. It is the rear axle ratio that came with them, at least on a Holden other than a tonner. 253 was 3.08 manual, 2.78 auto. 308 was 3.36 manual, 2.78 auto. Those rear axle ratios are fine for cruising and highway speeds although the 308 manual car with its 3.36 rear axle did tend to rev a bit much at highway speeds, although by the time I owned then in the 80's we used to run taller tyres like 245/60/14 which gave you a few more % taller tyre compared to say an E70H14. The 6cyl were not far off valve bouncing with the standard 3.55 with a manual doing 110km/h, they were not much fun. Something like a cab-chassis with a good cyl and Trimatic were OK if you changed the rear axle to 3.08. They weren't exactly fast but they were comfortable at highway speeds and the torque converter covered a lot for the taller rear axle in low speed work like reversing. I did have a 5.0L manual car with a 3.08 rear axle but it was horrible for towing or trying to reverse, best changed out for an auto.
I always used to buy 5.0L/308 Premier or Statesman as everyday drivers and wreck them once rego ran out. So I had a lot of Devilles and Premiers. I tended to steer away from commercials or Holden/Belmont/Kingswood as they were often manual if fitted with a 308. I used to use them as tow cars, and favoured HJ's as they had the best engines and an unbreakable gearbox. The best of the manuals as tow cars were 253 3spd column shift as they always had a 3.08 rear axle (unless they were a cab-chassis) and reverse was good whereas M20 fitted cars were useless as reverse with a 3.08 rear axle was way too high geared and you just burned up clutches, not to mention the 4spd were far more breakage prone than a 3spd. The absolute best high speed cars or towing cars were those fitted with a 350 or 400 or 454 or similar with TH400 and a 2.78 or 2.6 rear axle. I had a HJ Kingswood ute like that, was a great long distance car, got written off in a head on though with a Renault.
The Holden 6 wasn't a poor man's car. The bread and butter Holden was a 186 and later 202 Kingwood sedan, they were the volume cars built for sale that suited the Australian buyers. Someone with a bit more $ forked out for a Premier but normally a 6cyl. For those that thought like we do but didn't want a coupe, they shelled for the top spec Holden (V8 Premier) or the sporty Holden (GTS sedan). They would have optioned a 308/5.0L or even bought a GTS350 sedan, however the (for want of a better word) smarter ones knew how expensive a GTS was to insure so they bought the V8 Kingswood or V8 Premier or optioned V8's in HJ-HZ. That is exactly what the original buyer of my HJ Premier did, he ticked every option he could other than dual exhaust and cloth inserts. It actually cost more than a 5.0L auto GTS however he would have recouped the cost with the first insurance premium.
6 cyl cars back in the day was more of a tradition, Falcons sold 250 6 cyl auto as the key selling car and Valiant the 245 and 265 6 cyl, who bought a 215 ? no one with a brain.
If Holden had say a 250 6 cyl it would of sold such the most. but Australians had a fear of V8's being what ever to using more fuel because V8 meant to them that it was a racing car ? or you were a rat bag ? I worked at a Service Station in 1976 and the BS I would hear from customers was so much total shit ranting about V8's chewing fuel etc, not to mention they never owned one.
The Holden 6 was a town runabout only really. if one was serious on the highway you needed a 253 at least so as not to get the shits stuck behind trucks in QLD back in the days, you needed the extra power to over take the bastards and the wobble boxes as well.
As for your statement of 6cly 110KM/H
My dad had a HQ 173 manual and he would drive at 80MPH cruse speed doing 4hr drive I watched siting in the back behind him looking. and it would do 100MPH flat no valve bounce at all with 3.55 diff and my mums HR 186 auto 3.36 diff would do 97 MPH I seen this maybe a 100's times and her HJ 202 auto I do not know 150KM/H for sure but the stupid speedo in them would bounce about to much due to the stupid long setup speedo, just like the HK was the same, I could not truly tell because the bumps in the road made it inaccurate over from around 100mph. not to mention the Falcon speedos up to XY were spastic they would bounce about wildly way out of control like 40MPH or more because of the bumps.
Stock Red motor valve springs start to shimmy over 4700RPM say and they will valve bounce at 5000RPM.
My Falcon XG Longreach ute that I ordered with LSD was built at the latest 7 days before I got it and it was built in Vic it was made in the same month proven by the Comp plate.
My VY SS was the same month build as well that I ordered it June but got it in July a couple of days after I ordered it I think.
As far as the HZ GTS goes I would rather order a 5.0L Premier 4speed with optional GTS instruments 3.08 LSD and just get the dual exhaust on it myself, not to mention toss the std camshaft, block the EGR from entering the intake manifold totally and put stronger valve springs in it without lifting the heads. for as start, because I could not live with how gutless they were.