looksk good, but with all the room in that engine bay, why did you go with those manifolds? i'm guessing from the intake / spacer / carb / velocity stack, that you want it to breathe?
I have one of those trucks in my shop right now. Same year grille, body style, and trim level.
You can climb in the engine compartment and close the hood with the engine in there. Ask me how I know.
In reply to AngryCorvair:
Thanks.
Mostly because they were free, I didn't want to put out another 60-100 for headers. Plus, I'm not sure if I'm going to run the spacer yet, it's a four hole not open. I might try it both ways, I'm going for more torque down low as well so that was another plus for stockish exhaust manifolds; oh, and the whole manual transmission linkage thing, avoids the whole issue i would have with full length headers. The carb is only 600cfm and the intake is a performer rpm; stock pistons with 62cc 327 heads. It'll be a daily driver, you have no idea how hard it was to go with a regular timing chain and not that noisy gear drive sitting on the shelf lol.
porksboy wrote:
I have one of those trucks in my shop right now. Same year grille, body style, and trim level.
You can climb in the engine compartment and close the hood with the engine in there. Ask me how I know.
lol, need any parts? I have a serious surplus going on over here at this point.
That is probably my favorite Chevy pickup body style.
Looking good!
327 too
I'm to young to have been around when they were common place but I hear 283s and 327s are fun bullet proof V8s - and I bet they rev better than the typical redneck 350 too.
Jensenman wrote:
That is probably my favorite Chevy pickup body style.
Looking good!
The double walled cab makes it real tough to chop!
Nice truck.
Ha, a high school friend had a '73 with a out-dated but built 350 out of another friends impala drag car. Heads, cams, open headers, big carb, velocity stack much like the one you're using, etc... It was a total pile, ran 13 flat with a worn out junkyard 3 speed auto, sounded like the devil, and was a nightmare to drive. It eventually succumbed to rust and hours upon hours of burnouts and doughnuts. He cried at the junkyard when we dropped it off.
It had about 3 functioning circuits in the wiring harness. Headlights, wipers, and an un-fused 12v off the ignition switch for the MSD and one brake light that always stayed lit. No gauges (or dash, really...) save for an autometer tach, oil pressure, and the stock speedo. Starter was actuated with a household light switch.
I've always wanted to build a proper hot rod truck but I don't think I could ever get close to the fun we had as indestructible 16 year olds in that thing.
Anyway, sorry to threadjack, you must post a picture of that thing doing a big nasty burnout when you get it running.
porksboy wrote:
I have one of those trucks in my shop right now. Same year grille, body style, and trim level.
You can climb in the engine compartment and close the hood with the engine in there. Ask me how I know.
"HAhahahaa... heh heh heh... eh.... Ok. ok. Now let me out..."
Are you going to take it to the challenge?
In reply to skruffy:
Dude, awesome story! and yea, an obligatory burnout in the alley will be happening first thing. 327 with small chamber heads+4-speed+4:11's in the rear. Yeah, I think i can make it work .
In reply to TheV8Kid:
lol, florida is a little far for me.