Re: [AMC-list] Exotic AMC engines?
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [AMC-list] Exotic AMC engines?



My Ex spent 8-grand on a myth?  It's possible, I wasn't there, but Hot Rod/Car Craft have mentioned "the fix" to avoid spinning that bearing on their AMC V-8 builds, so maybe THEY know something YOU don't.   I ALWAYS check my oil.  I found if an engine was overfilled, it either blew it out the pipes, or caused a valve cover leak over time.  I think "the fix" is also on Youtube. You aren't very good with design? Lots of stuff could be done, even IF the cammer engine was taller.  Chrysler had a great idea with their  6, they SLANTED it!  AMC couldn't...have done the same?  Certain foreign firms(Mercedes-Benz) slanted their engines, too, no problem there.  As you're aware, the '68-69 AMX hoods had "useless bulges" suggestive of I don't know what, but those never stopped me from lusting over the (AMXs--I had #650, a red-red '68 with white stripes & 4-spd, 390go-pak) and, a '70 lime-green 4-spd, 390 Go-Pak) two I owned.  I "give-it"(greif) to
 everybody.  Chrysler let people down, imo, by not making their slant-six with a cross-flow Hemi-head, the exhaust coming out the left and down and out.  The IKA Torino was RACED.  It appeared at LeMans and won/placed in Germany @ the "'ring".  It was raced all over South America.  Fango drove one occasionally in competition. Sure it was odd, but it should have been developed with a different cammer head, SOHC/DOHC.  Instead of even thinking of the still thirsty wankle, If AMC had developed a cammer 6, they could have, for the Pacer, hacked two cylinders off and turbo'd it, jumping ahead of Buick by a few years, and having economy/urge, your choice, dependent on your "loud-pedal."  I think consumer goods should generally be "over-built", and it's a reasonable expectation to  think it should hold-together with some street-races, not spinning a bearing before the warranty's up, like my '70 AMX (purchased used with a replacement 390, due to,
 "Ta-Da! --spun bearing).  We were told of Breedlove's records, and even the ads suggested, "Test-drag a Javelin."  And with the AMX, Donohue-Penske's victories in Trans-AM, SC360 Hornet, the SCrambler,--the Machine--those were all AMC performance-themed, "hot" cars that surprised many of the Big Three.  The OHC-Pontiac 6 was first designed by Delorean's teams to go into the Pontiac version of the Corvette, the Banshee, and it had an odd bulge in the hood due to the cammer engine's not being slanted.  Chevy, if it wanted a 6, should have made the Pontiac OHC, and then it'd(OHC) probably be around today.  I think you're correct that if you wanted acceleration, you just checked-off "V-8" on an option sheet.   

 

________________________________
 From: Frank Swygert <farna@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 
Sent: Thursday, January 3, 2013 8:49 AM
Subject: Re: [AMC-list] Exotic AMC engines?
  
Message: 5
Date: Wed, 2 Jan 2013 20:09:30 -0800 (PST)
From: Jack Dale<mercendarian@xxxxxxxxx>

I guess you're right.? That must be why AMC was caught "flat-footed" when the Wankle engine for the Pacer fell through/became impractical.? A cammer-head for the inliners would have attracted more press for the Pacer, but they slapped a two barrel on the 258cu 6, and that was that.? '75 was when they should have been developing the old Willys OHC on the IKA Torino.? I like their 2nd-gen. efforts, except that AMC damaged its brand, imo,?with that bearing that'd spin due to insufficient oil to the mains on wild acceleration.?? There should have been a RECALL to ensure long-life to that bearing, that caused AMC millions (I'm guessing) in warranty claims.

================================

The AMC six was almost too tall to fit under the Pacer hood as it was, the air filter had to have an offset housing. There's no way a taller OHC engine would have fit without a hump in the hood, which would have totally ruined the sleek lines of the original Pacer. That raised grille in the later models didn't make it look any better either. That WAS NOT required to fit in a V-8, it was just done to make the car look different from previous years, but it would have been required (with a raised center section all the way back) for an OHC six.

You're obviously not familiar with the Tornado/Torino OHC engine. It's a bit on the odd side -- the cam had a single lobe for both intake and exhaust valves, severely limiting cam grind. That's one thing that could have been fixed, but would have required a new head -- may as well design one for the venerable 232/258. Sixes just were not popular in the US in the 60s and 70s -- there was no reason to make a high performance model. If you wanted more power go to the 304 V-8, simple as that. The Pontiac OHC six was interesting, but not interesting enough to sell enough to stay in production. If it had, AMC may have developed an OHC head, but it didn't, and they didn't.

There's no problem with the AMC V-8. It can spin #7 rod bearing, but only under abnormal conditions when it is starved for oil. Keep oil in the pan and you'll never have that problem. The extra oil line doesn't help as much as running six quarts of oil instead of five. You're buying into a myth! Even if this were not the case, the engine was designed as a passenger car engine, not a race engine. It does it's designed duty extremely well with no problems at all, it's only when pushed beyond it's design limits that any problems start appearing. The engineers did a fantastic job.

-- Frank Swygert
Editor - American Motors Cars Magazine
http://www.amc-mag.com/

_______________________________________________
AMC-list mailing list
AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://list.amc-list.com/pipermail/amc-list-amc-list.com/attachments/20130104/0aec6edc/attachment.htm>
_______________________________________________
AMC-list mailing list
AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com


Home Back to the Home of the AMC Gremlin 


This site contains affiliate links for which we may be compensated