My point was all of the HK through to HQ carbs (until ADR27 compliant engines appeared about 8/73) are the same, only difference being the vacuum source between auto and manual applications.
As a bit of background, we got a US numbered carb supplied to us for GTS327 as it was a 1967 spec carb which was pre-emissions. 1968 spec carbs in the USA went to pollution spec so GMH got their own unique numbers starting around the introduction of the Canadian 327 engine. 702 was 1960's, with 703 being the Californian spec pollution carb up until 1967, then all 702 became pollution spec. When the 1970 model year started the carbs went to 704.
So whilst a late HK through to HG were 7029281, 2, 3 and 4 for respectively 308 manual, 308 auto, 350 manual and 350 auto, the HQ initially were 7041281, 2, 3 and 4. Identical carbs, the 4 instead of 2 meaning 1970's and the 1 instead of the 9 as they were first numbered in 1971 instead of 1969. Back to the point, the only difference between the 350 manual carbs for HQ and HT is the numbers. If you are chasing Concours correctness, the wrong HT carb is no better than a HQ carb as the only difference is the numbers. Of the 5 x different HT carbs, they are all stamped either differently or missing codes or different date codes. So a carby off a late HT GTS350M is wrong in a Concours sense for all of the HT's prior to it and vice versa, and you'll pay in excess of $10k for one as well, so you are best getting the right one, or use a far cheaper wrong one, like use a US 7029213 which you'll pickup for near nothing. Also be careful, someone was stamping blank carb bodies a few years back and you don't want to go paying big bucks for a fake.
Further background, at any given time the same spec/tune carb was used for everything from 240hp 327 to 300hp 350. So the 250hp L73 (GTS327 engine) used the same carb as the 275hp L30 (fuelie headed 327) to the 295/300hp 350 (L48 aka HT-HG GTS350 manual). They just got slightly different numbers depending upon the brand usage (8 in for example 7029283 for GMH in the 60's and earlier 70's), the 702/703/704 variation and the 4th digit for the year of introduction of the carb. There is also some variations in the final digit over and above manual V auto, to do with variations along the way.
Edited by user Wednesday, 21 June 2023 11:29:16 AM(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified