Re: [Amc-list] Rambler six comma fast
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Re: [Amc-list] Rambler six comma fast
- From: adh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (Sandwich Maker)
- Date: Thu, 14 Aug 2008 13:56:23 -0400 (EDT)
" From: Tom Jennings <tomj@xxxxxxx>
"
" Frank Swygert wrote:
" > In order to get the best transmission options you definitely want a 72+
" > block!
"
" Absolutely. I can't think of any transmission I'd LIKE that would fit
" behind the old six pattern. (What's the choice, the BW autos, T96, T14,
" anything else at all? Funky old Nash crashboxes don't count :-)
i really can't think what i should ask for it, but i have one of the
infamous 'mexican' bellhousings. this will put an amc t-10 onto a
pre-'72 six, and by that token would also accept a doug nash 5sp and i
suspect a dne 6sp with the amc input from a 5sp.
i've mentioned this before - it has the shape and reinforcements to be
drilled for a gm tranny pattern but it's also clearly way too deep for
any gm trannies i know. very mysterious...
" > A 72-mid 80 block (cast iron intake) would be best as they are
" > slightly heavier than mid 80+ (aluminum intake). Lucky for you the bore
" > is the same for the 199/232/258, and the manual trans crank flanges are
" > the same.
"
" And luckily those are common enough. The 'tall deck' years are in there
" too, right? Damn, someone needs to go through the TSMs and Datson books
" and type all that crap into one huge-a** spreadsheet so we have it all
" in one place! bore stroke rod length pin height deck height ... not
" rocket science. Four people in a room with beer and keyboards could get
" it done in an afternoon.
i could probably do it all myself without beer in a couple hours.
on the 199/232/258/4.0:
bore: 199, 232, 258, 3.75". 4.0, 3.88"
stroke: 199, 3.00". 232, 3.50". 258, 3.895". 4.0, 3.44".
pin height: 1.6" +/-, except '80-'90 258s, 1.65"
rod length: 199, 6.125". 232, 5.875" '64-'70; 6.125" '71-9. 258,
5.875". 4.0, 6.125".
or: 6.125", 199, '71-9 232, 4.0.
5.875", '64-'70 232, 258.
deck height: '64-'70, 'low'. '71-up, 'high' [+ ~1/4"].
exact deck height can be derived from the 199 and 232, which were
designed for zero deck clearance at tdc. they used different pistons;
the 258 was designed to run 'down the hole' so slugs could be shared
with the 232 - until '80 when the 232 was dropped. '80s slugs won't
fit any six but the 258, but afaik they fit all 258s. they come back
to [near] zero deck clearance.
block weight: '64-'80, heavy. '81-5, light. '86-up, variously
heavy.
bellhousing pattern: '64-'71, small early six. '72-up, gen2 v8.
head: '64-7, 56cc closed chamber. '68-'76, 66cc open
chamber. '77-9, 74cc open chamber.
'80s - afaict started out 74cc but then shrank almost
immediately - back to 66cc? - then possibly again in
'83 and/or '86; i recall late-'80s specs of 9.2:1
which would be ~60cc.
4.0, 56-58cc closed chamber.
also, '72 - first bridged-rocker head; '74 - last
shaft rocker head.
pistons change for those years also, and by my calc even though cr
dropped in '77 the slugs still have smaller dish than '68-'76.
'68-'70 199 slugs were flattops. afaik '65-7 weren't but were
obsoleted long ago, service replaced by the flattops.
i still wonder if the 4.0 isn't -really- 3 7/8" x 3 7/16" - 3.875" x
3.4375"...
________________________________________________________________________
Andrew Hay the genius nature
internet rambler is to see what all have seen
adh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and think what none thought
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