" From: Archimedes <Freedom@xxxxxxxx> " " " greg_taylor@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx said: " " >I've never seen this pop up in AMC discussions before ... did AMC ever " >create a V8 diesel prototype? " " " Given the gas crisis and the diesel activity at GM in the late seventies, it's a sure bet AMC was looking. However, with truck sales in the range they were at the time, it probably would have cost AMC too much to make its own V8 diesel. Heck, Ford used an IH diesel in its F-trucks (I have a 1990 -- no throwing rotten fruit, please, I only bought it to haul around AMCs), Dodge still uses the Cummins diesel... " " AMC would have been foolish to try. GM had a lot more money to spend engineering a V8 diesel for its big car line (Impala, Park Avenue, etc), and they flubbed it up miserably. you can't lay all the blame on engineering. what would you have said to an impala 6.2? it still could be a sweet swap. but that engine couldn't be ready in time. " [] " " >What would be involved in converting an AMC V8 over to make it a diesel? " >An idea I've been milling around for my '89 Grand Wagoneer. " " " The big mistake GM made with its car line diesels was to assume their block was strong enough for the extra stresses of burning diesel. They weren't. they actually covered that pretty well. olds, buick, and pontiac always used high strength iron in their blocks like amc, and the olds and poncho smallblocks were low-deck bigblocks. olds actually shrank their 455 down to 350 to make the diesel, with correspondingly thick cylinder walls for a start. they also filled in many places where the 455 block was webbed, like around the main journals. the diesel block weighed substantially more than a 455 block. but in a dozen other ways the design wasn't up to it, not least in manufacturing precision. decks have to be squarer to the crank than a gas engine and flatter. bores have to be squarer and rounder [if that makes sense]. and so on. race engines are built this way but no manufacturer wastes resources doing this on production gas engines. it's possible the 5.7 was a stopgap while they designed and tooled up for the 6.2/6.5. it might have been better if they'd waited. " AMC V8's were always overbuilt and orders of magnitude stronger in many areas than the Big Three smallblocks, but even so I doubt they are built strong enough for diesel. i agree. data point: the gm 6.2/6.5 was designed to fit within the same 'envelope' as the chevy 350 and 454; width/height/length generally, and also motor mounts, bellhousing pattern, and water outlet placement. but it still weighs over 100 lbs more than a bbc, and at that it's a lightweight in its class, not used afaik in anything bigger than a 1-ton. 427s could once be found in 5-ton dumps, the powerstroke is rated for 33000 lbs gvw and the cummins 66000 lbs [and the 12v version was warranteed for 500000 mi between overhauls]. ________________________________________________________________________ Andrew Hay the genius nature internet rambler is to see what all have seen adh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and think what none thought _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list