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Re: engine stamp painting
As well as the carb flange, water pump snout and water inlet tube opening.
I will try and post the picture tonight. Rick |
Re: engine stamp painting
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The pad was bare. They actually put a piece of masking tape over the pad when the engine was painted. [/ QUOTE ] What was their reasoning for keeping it bare? Why did they go to this effort? Thanks. |
Re: engine stamp painting
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[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] The pad was bare. They actually put a piece of masking tape over the pad when the engine was painted. [/ QUOTE ] What was their reasoning for keeping it bare? Why did they go to this effort? Thanks. [/ QUOTE ] Stamping on a painted surface can be "messy". We stamp steel, brass and aluminum with serial, model #s, etc. I'm sure an engineer specified the pad be masked, along with the other parts, and that is the way the procedure was written up. You can also bet that numerous blocks had the tape ommitted, fall off, etc and the stamping was done through the paint. Attached is a pad photo of a low mile, never repainted L78. The pad was not painted at Tonawanda. Dave |
Re: engine stamp painting
Good stuff Dave. That's what I was looking for.
Thank you! |
Re: engine stamp painting
Check out the pic of Pascoe's survivor 69 Z... the one with the alt removed... it appears as though the masking tape (JohnZ confirmed) that a piece of 2" wide masking tape was used... the edge of the water pump was also sans paint...
This is how the engine on the Black 69 RS/Z will be done... https://www.yenko.net/photos/data/533/medium/Z39B.jpg |
Re: engine stamp painting
The pads were masked with a piece of tape as the suffix had to be readable at the entry to the shipping dock conveyor system so the engine could be routed to the correct spot along the dock for racking and rail car loading; the suffix code was scrawled on the side of the block (upside-down) in grease pencil at the first (air-gage) station on the engine assembly line, but that wasn't visible after the paint booth.
The engine plant stamp was done on big-blocks BEFORE the heads went on, and AFTER the heads went on on small-blocks. https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...lins/beers.gif |
Re: engine stamp painting
John,
Regarding the BBC's @ Tonawanda, the NCRS guys told me that the suffix codes were written on the side of the blocks ( somewhere ), in crayon (upside down) and then transferred to the pad before the heads were installed. So, how did they know which engines got L/89? Did the written, then subsequently stamped codes tell them, or did a particular engine get "tagged" for L/89 ahead of time? The painting process for L/89 BBC's had to be somewhat special in that there wasn't much, if any overspray on the aluminum heads. How was that accomplished? I have as of yet to get a definitive answer to that question. Steve |
Re: engine stamp painting
Steve there is an older thread on this board with a picture of a set of low mileage early take off L88 or L89 heads which show the amount of overspray on them... it may have been a year or more ago. I believe that the photos were from Pascoe but I could be wrong on that.
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Re: engine stamp painting
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Here is one picture that I have. Notice the VIN pad, water pump snout and radiator hose inlet. All bare steel.
Rick |
Re: engine stamp painting
That pic of survivor DZ pad is simply a beautiful thing! https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...emlins/eek.gif.
I've spent my share of time w/ flashlites under hoods or wherever scraping and cleaning dead engine pads over the years and that's just pure eye candy to this Chevy guy!. ~ Pete https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...lins/beers.gif |
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