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#1
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COPO 9561 427 Motors
Question: Can someone explain to me why there would be a A-22-9 casting date on the Iron 427 block in a 69 COPO Camaro that is original to the car and car was built in 9 (Sept) of 1969 ? I have seen 3 69 COPO Iron 427 Camaros built in Sept 69 with the original engine and with original docs and with the Jan 22 1969 casting date on block. Very late production cars.
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Leonard Blevins |
#2
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Very common to see on late cars.
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#3
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Trying to understand why. Why the earlier built COPOs had used later produced cast blocks?
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Leonard Blevins |
The Following User Says Thank You to Leonard For This Useful Post: | ||
rsinor (08-02-2020) |
#4
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Probably because the engines were built in batches and sitting in que waiting for the next copo order. I doubt any engines were organized by date and line workers just grabbed the easiest available in line most likely. Just speculation on my part and some of the ex GM members here might have a better explanation.
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#5
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Sounds about right. Being a very limited use engine there was no need for them to be cast that often.
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#6
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As the owner of a late 69 COPO it would be interesting to understand this. I'm not sure when the 1st run of L72's were cast but I would have to believe that the Jan 22 1969 cast date would be one of the early cast dates. COPOs weren't sold to the public until January correct (built late Dec. 68)?
There's always a chance that Tonowanda "lost" a rack of completed L72 (3 to a rack) engines in Q1 but found them later for those Sept. built cars? Or Tonowanda lost a batch of early cast blocks and never assembled them until they were needed for the Sept. cars? Leonard, on those 3 COPOs was the stamped engine assembly date more in line with the Sept. car build? If that is the case, it would point to a batch of castings that were bypassed at Tonowanda. Would be interesting to know of the 260ish known iron block cars in the Registry, how many have original engines and what the cast & assembly dates are for those cars.
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SOLD 1969 427 COPO Camaro Lemans Blue/Black, M22 4 speed, 15,800 original miles |
#7
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Yes, the stamped assembly dates on all 3 cars was in line for the Sept build.
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Leonard Blevins |
#8
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Quote:
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The Following User Says Thank You to RALLY For This Useful Post: | ||
L72copocamaro (07-24-2020) |
#9
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Mine was assembled in January and build date of car was 4C. I was curious also and one year at the Camaro Nationals in Niagara Falls Fran Preve and another gentleman, an engineer at Tonawanda spoke to the group. I have his card somewhere, but can’t remember his name. He had taken it upon himself to keep records on numbers of the various engines built at Tonawanda. I believe he was the source of the 1015 L72’s built at Tonawanda that floated around for years. I asked him the building/assembly date question because of my car and he said that was perfectly normal. In the December/January time frame they had no idea how many L72’s they would need, so they made a sizeable run. When an engine was needed there was no first in first out system, it was ship what was easiest to get to.
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#10
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Is it correct that Tonowanda applied the month/day stamp once they completed the engine assembly? If so, then the big spread between cast date and car build date would have to be related to no "first in/first out" of the bare cast blocks vs completed engines waiting for orders. Or am I missing something?
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SOLD 1969 427 COPO Camaro Lemans Blue/Black, M22 4 speed, 15,800 original miles |
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