63 Parisienne sport coupe (The Big GTO), black, maroon interior, 409 4 speed; former owner of a 59 El Camino, 63 Corvette SWC, 62 Chev Bel Air SC. 1963- Pontiac top selling car in Canada
Mahone Bay, NS Still not old enough to need an automatic
63 Parisienne sport coupe (The Big GTO), black, maroon interior, 409 4 speed; former owner of a 59 El Camino, 63 Corvette SWC, 62 Chev Bel Air SC. 1963- Pontiac top selling car in Canada
Mahone Bay, NS Still not old enough to need an automatic
63 Parisienne sport coupe (The Big GTO), black, maroon interior, 409 4 speed; former owner of a 59 El Camino, 63 Corvette SWC, 62 Chev Bel Air SC. 1963- Pontiac top selling car in Canada
Mahone Bay, NS Still not old enough to need an automatic
Yup, the Olds had 6 head bolts and also ended up turbocharging it (with a 10.5:1 compression & water-alcohol injection!), while Buick maintained the trademark nail valve head that looked unique.
With the fuel crisis still fresh in people's minds, Buick in '74 bought back the tooling from Jeep, which hadn't been used since the AMC take-over that resulted in AMC power starting in the '72 line. Buick hurried it into production starting '75 models. They did the V6 bores so they could use the existing 350 parts and machining, but they still didn't have time or budget to address the shared crank pin design that resulted in shake. Mid-year '77 on the H-cars (Skyhawk etc) they introduced a more complex crank with offset crank pins to even out the pulses (that meant redesigning the camshafts to match). For '78 the even-fire versions were the only versions henceforth, and the turbo, take 1, was unleashed for '78. The Grand Nationals were take 2 & were vastly better. Take 3 was the GNX and it was too good to drop after '88 & so it's engine went into special edition Trans Ams, with compromises for hood clearance.
There were naturally aspirated V6s with 196, 231, 252 cubes. The 252s were kinda rare, coming only in early-to-mid 80's RWD LeSabres & Electras, plus Sedan DeVilles as an alternate to the V8-6-4 experiment, and had an aluminum intake & Quadrajet 4-barrel. They were bored out quite a bit, much like the 400 small block Chevies were.
Speaking of the switch to even-firing V6s, a friend once owned a '78 Buick Skylark (the Nova kind) with the new V6. It still ran rough so they investigated & found the odd-fire cam in the even-fire engine assembly. He got a new engine swapped in under warranty. He kept it until he bought one of the first 1982 S10 pickups around, and powered by a 2.8 V6 Citation engine.
-- Edited by CdnGMfan on Sunday 7th of April 2024 02:53:43 AM
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67 Chevelle Malibu Sport Coupe, Oshawa-built 250 PG never disturbed.
In garage, 296 cid inline six & TH350...
Cam, Toronto.
I don't judge a man by how far he's fallen, but by how far back he bounces - Patton
I seem to remember reading the Rover version and its many changes over the years became volume wise and racing wise second to the sbc in worldwide production number of years of manufacturer production. Quite a run for this original 60s GM invention and the sbc from the 50s. Keep it simple stupid works, dont make changes for the sake of change, allow improvements to say heads, intakes, exhaust manifolds, transmissions, internals, etc to bolt to the original blocks. This is why you see so many hot rods from the 30s on with the sbc in them, like say the American Graffiti 32 deuce coupe. The parts availability for modifying and bolting them into just about anything is endless.
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63 Parisienne sport coupe (The Big GTO), black, maroon interior, 409 4 speed; former owner of a 59 El Camino, 63 Corvette SWC, 62 Chev Bel Air SC. 1963- Pontiac top selling car in Canada
Mahone Bay, NS Still not old enough to need an automatic
Speaking of the switch to even-firing V6s, a friend once owned a '78 Buick Skylark (the Nova kind) with the new V6. It still ran rough so they investigated & found the odd-fire cam in the even-fire engine assembly. He got a new engine swapped in under warranty. He kept it until he bought one of the first 1982 S10 pickups around, and powered by a 2.8 V6 Citation engine.
Cam, my old brain may be wrong here and having worked at the dealership for so long I should remember this. Anyway, I thought the Citation 2.8 and the S10 2.8 were totally different engines. Isn't the 2.8 S10 engine the 90 degree V6 and the Citation 2.8 engine is a 60 degree V6? I know there was 2 different 2.8's and I was thinking the 60 degree went into the transverse (FWD) applications and the 90 degree was in the RWD applications like the S10 and Camaro?
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1966 Strato Chief 2 door, 427 4 speed, 45,000 original miles
1966 Grande Parisienne, 396 1 of 23 factory air cars
Carl, yes the 2.8 was the 60 degree V6 that was developed for the FWD X-cars like the Citation and was introduced around May of '79. The Buick V6 is a 90 degree design that was a cast iron V6 version of the aluminum 215.
The S10 dropped the 2.8 narrow V6 for '85 and got serious with a 4.3 Chevrolet V6 that is 3/4s of a 350 Chevy V8. As Hammy Hamster said, "that's another story".
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67 Chevelle Malibu Sport Coupe, Oshawa-built 250 PG never disturbed.
In garage, 296 cid inline six & TH350...
Cam, Toronto.
I don't judge a man by how far he's fallen, but by how far back he bounces - Patton