First, I have been working on a 94 Olds Cutlass Sierra (another orphan car at least, but not an AMC). I bought this car from my neighbor and it had a severe coolant leak which I traced to a corroded freeze plug on the back side of the V6 block. Have you ever tried to replace one of these in a FWD car? Not easy. I had to use an expandable rubber plug because there was no room to drive a brass plug into the hole. I drove the old plug into the block and could not extract it so I left it in the cooling passage. I hope that won't be fatal to the engine, but it will be our little secrect because I intend to sell the car soon. I also replaced a coolant bleed fixture (steel) with a junkyard part. That pipe had suffered from poor maintenance. The PO used plain water in the cooling system after the antifreeze leaked out, leading to fairly widespread corrosion of many steel parts. I replaced all of the PCV hoses with good junkyard hoses too. These are all factory parts with special rubber ends that it is easier to get from the junkyard than to try to find at the dealer. New oxygen sensor too, since I was working on the back side of the engine anyway. Next I need to fix the power window on the driver's door and detail the car before selling it. The PO had two little girls who must have been allowed to eat crackers every day in the car. Never saw so many crumbs, toys, and hair barrette beneath the seats. Then on to the 65 Rambler sedan with the 196 OHV engine I mentioned in an earlier post. The engine is out of the car and mostly stripped. I'll take the block to the machine shop next week. Next, I sold some Rambler parts to a guy from Soquel last night who has a 59 Rambler Classic. It currently has the OHV six. He wants to put a 287 or 327 V8 in it. What will need to be changed to fit the V8? Would a more "modern" AMC V8 be easier to install? TIA, Joe Fulton _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list