In the current issue of the Restorer, there is an excellent article on page 9, by Everett Ogilvie which is part 2 of 2 of a detailed discussion of the legendary "450 horsepower L72 engine". It has been a long time since I mothballed my engineering textbooks, and the article piqued my interest in relearning the relationships between horsepower and torque. For those that may be interested, I found an excellent discussion at the following website ------------- http://home.inu.net/davidstua/horsepower_and_torque.htm
Everett: If you see this post, does your source know if that 460+ horsepower MK IV tested at the Chevrolet Engineering Center (note, page 10, Restorer), was a specially built drone, designed to yield extraordinarily high peak horsepower numbers. I understand that you are using published numbers, but they can be manipulated in the same manner as the air cleaner decals. This is not meant to to criticize anything that you have written, but if that 460 HP was an honest figure, wouldn't it mean that if the tripower on all the '67 L71's were replaced with 4bbl Holleys like those used on the L78 and L72, then these would have technically produced 460 HP.
Joe
Everett: If you see this post, does your source know if that 460+ horsepower MK IV tested at the Chevrolet Engineering Center (note, page 10, Restorer), was a specially built drone, designed to yield extraordinarily high peak horsepower numbers. I understand that you are using published numbers, but they can be manipulated in the same manner as the air cleaner decals. This is not meant to to criticize anything that you have written, but if that 460 HP was an honest figure, wouldn't it mean that if the tripower on all the '67 L71's were replaced with 4bbl Holleys like those used on the L78 and L72, then these would have technically produced 460 HP.
Joe
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