Geoff has already given the numbers. About 125 auto HT GTS350.
The reason Nick for the extra HK GTS327's is a good one, GMH never intended to build that many. I'll tell you one day why there were so many.
The HK GTS327 is held in high esteem for two reasons. Firstly the Holden coupe is the reason Ford built the XR GT. Their moles/spies found out and Ford beat GMH to the punch. GMH had never intended the HK GTS327 for Series Production, just for the ATCC or Improved Production with Norm Beechey. It was Ford's win in 1967 at the Gallagher 500 that changed their minds, and thus the suspension of the car was tuned as one of the last things done to the car with that in mind. Secondly the HK GTS327's easy win in 1968 was the reason Ford created the GT-HO, without the GTS327's win at Bathurst there would be no GT-HO.
The HT GTS350 i'll go into later, have to run.
The HT GTS350 wasn't improved over the HK to keep up with what Ford were doing, it was a simple evolution of HK GTS327. The HT GTS350 was signed and sealed ready to go before the HK coupe was even released to the public. It simply got the standard 350ci 4BBL engine, the L48 as this was the only 350ci Chev engine available in 1967 and 1968. The LM1 engine in the HT 350 auto wasn't released in US vehicles until 1969 model year and the auto option was a late thing in HT evolution, thus the GTS350 got the 1969 spec L48 (300hp rather than 295hp for 1967 and 1968). The HT GTS350 manual is a special car, more special that many know (again this is not my story to tell). The fact it was allowed to be designed in 1967 and early 1968 with the L48 engine gives a glimpse of this - the L48 was essentially exclusive to Camaro up until this time. GM heavies including the GM Bill Mitchell were very much interested in what GMH were doing with their new coupe, more than most realise (remember the HT facelift design was done during HK design). Car guys like John Schinella were very much into the success of the car even after John went back to the USA to design cars like the 1977 Transam (Trigger from Smokey and the Bandit).
The reason the HT GTS350M is held in such high regard is as good as the HK GTS327 was, the HT was better. Plus the car won Bathurst again the next year against Ford's no-expenses spared GT-HO road registered race car, no simple feat, and also went on to win another two endurance races after Bathurst (Lakeside 1500 and then the 1970 Rothman's 12 hour at Surfer's Paradise). The 1969 race was faster in lap speed and total race time than 1970 so it is a strong possibility that the HT (or the HG facelift) would also have won in 1970 against the GT-HO II if GMH had continued with the Monaro as Harry Firth wanted them to.
So to many the HK GTS327 and HT GTS350 are very much valued similarly for different reasons. The HG is really no different to the HT, it is simply an unplanned facelift and it is only cosmetic differences. In reality the HT was cut short as the original HQ was scrapped and the new North American sourced HQ design we got was going to be so late that the HT would have run for too long. Those HT GTS350's with the USA engines show you roughly how many more HT GTS350's would have been built if HT ran as long as planned, the Canadian engines in the last of HG are top-ups to see the rest of HG out.
Edited by user Monday, 22 August 2016 4:44:18 AM(UTC)
| Reason: HT info added.