From: tom jennings <tomj@xxxxxxx> To: "AMC/Rambler owners, drivers and fans." <amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: [AMC-list] Nash 234.8 OHV six Message-ID: <ba24c4151003150047w2838d07by11cc916ebeb5b4fc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Does anyone (Frank?) know anything specific about the old Nash 234.8 inline 6? * What do you need? It was OHV, and there was an aluminum head for it.*Common practice back in the day was to have a base cast iron head and an option aluminum head with a higher compression ratio. The Nash-Healey used a dual carb version of the aluminum head. The Lemans option on the big Nash used basically the same engine
on the top of the line Ambassadors. Some were aluminum , some cast iron. . THe Nash Healey used it. I imagine it's unobtainable. * The Nash guys in NCCA (Nash car club of America) could probably find you one. But is it anything like the 195.6 ohv?* Not really . The 234.8 CID Nash engine came out in 1934. The 195.6 came out about the same time , as a flat head.
Nothing serious could interchange, it's 7-mains, so the block has to be longer. * yep pretty much. Is it a huge worthless boat anchor? Or just bigger?* Yep , pretty much there was not a lot of Hi-po equipment if any for this engine. Some one did use the NASH 322 I believe straight 8 at Bonnevile for a speed record for straight 8 engines some thing like 15 or 20 years ago. It was the 9 main bearing crank shaft that they wanted to use the that engine. It was one of the big high performance manufacturer owner who did the Nash 8 . Nash like Hudson pretty much left there straight 8s go after world War II . The 234.8 soldiered on until 1956 or so I believe. I believe 1956 is when Nash did the OHV version of the 195.6 flat head and dropped the big 234.8 six after wards. LRDaum
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