Greetings again.. Oh, yeah...absolutely right Frank...EyeCandy was what the brochures were printed for and with! The engines are little pieces of artwork and manifest absolutely nothing pursuant to 'valid' when compared to 'under the hood' of the real things... Whereever did they get THOSE colors?? I've seen purple, blue, yellow, etc, etc...and it was one of my first lessons...do NOT use the brochures for historical reference beyond specs...and even those 'photographs' are a mite deceiving. I found that in a lot of cases there aren't photos at all, but 'renderings' which stretch, shrink, heightening, lowering, making the 'subject' more appealing, albeit inaccurate! The colors of the engines and trannys are beyond funny! And absolutely NOT to be used as documentation for your restoration...unless, of course, you've a sense of humor... Again, Frank, I've been 'playing' this stuff for quite some time...and I actually recall going to dealers as a kid (ok, while 'younger') and paying careful heed to what the underhoods looked like... Things like... What color was where? Where does 'body color' go, and where does 'black' begin...and which black...flat, semi-gloss, or gloss?? What was painted and what was not? What colors went where? What, if anything, did the colors dictate (like engine size, etc).. So when my 'restoration' years began, the first dictate of the job was to discover what 'was original' to the unit at hand...includeing type of paint, quality of install (ie, mottling of metallic colors, runs in the paint, paint-overs (as in painting over dirt, etc)... This isn't such a simple job, as the chemicals used in removing the 'yuck' can alter the color...so that being said, yuck removal was a slow job...sometimes the paint would come right off with the yuck...(a lot of times,by the way since no primers were used under the hood!). Whenever I did this, I marked or photographed these for documentation purposes... In doing so, after a while it becomes quite clear what is 'original' and what is 'afterwards'... I have found odd colors in odd places... Differential carriers INSIDE are a reddish-brick color..and some outside as well (don't ask me which at the moment..I am getting old and can't remember EVERYTHING!) The undercarriage of Nash in '54 was an ugly as hell green. (why?) Ditto the underside of the Fulton Visor...'KellyGreen' or something like it. Ugly!! I never figured out why 'almond' for the big 6...nor did I ever figure out why Red valve covers over a deep gray (almost metallic) block (on the early '60s Rambler 10 series (known as 'Rambler Six', NOT '01' which was American which engines were 'universal Gray')... Well, I have said enough to get me into trouble for a while...so off to the shovel again I go... Jj (Oh, I DO want verify or disprove on the 327 engine colors. So...get out the parts cleaners folks and ...well, you know). By the way...Transmission color was engine color...and the engine color thru the trannys from the above cars followed; orange on HighCompression, RampartRed on Lo (ok, Frank, 'Normal').. I wish I knew where the photos were of the jobs spoken above, but...well, like I said, I don't remember Everything! -----Original Message----- From: amc-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:amc-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Frank Swygert Sent: Monday, December 22, 2008 1:51 PM To: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: [Amc-list] '63 Ambo answers to questions noone asked! Jerijan, all the notes I have from way back only state that the 327 was RED -- no difference between hi and low compression (or rather high and "normal" compression). WHERE did you get the info that the hi-comp was a different color? Don't say "under the hood of a car" unless you know 100% that it was factory -- too many places just paint everything whatever color most of the engines they rebuild are painted, or as in my case, whatever they think will look good. Now if you have a factory color photo, that's different! The sales brochures and show displays, by the way, aren't the correct colors. I've seen YELLOW AMC sixes in brochures and new car show displays -- those are just "eye candy" colors, not what was used (I'm sure you know that Jj, as most of the regulars here, but some may not). --------------- Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2008 07:52:49 -0500 From: "Jerijan" <jerijan@xxxxxxxxxxx> If your engine is "Ramparts Red" (or Rambler Red), and it is original to that car, then it IS a 327 LO compression (ie, two bbl). The HiComp number was more Orange (as in, umm, well, ChevyOrange)...ChevyOrange in fact is the nearest color to that I've seen, and it's what I've used to recolor the engines (in 58 up). Jj -- Frank Swygert Publisher, "American Motors Cars" Magazine (AMC) For all AMC enthusiasts http://farna.home.att.net/AMC.html (free download available!) _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list