Hi everyone,
I have long been interested in the discrepancies found between a particular
engines assembly date and the casting date of its cylinder block. The years
of production I am mostly interested in here would be from 1967 to 1972.
I personally own an L/78 engine that I purchased from its original owner and
the spread between the blocks casting date and the engines assembly date is
nearly six (6) months. I know this is a stretch by most standards. Recently,
I learned of a fellow with a late production '68 Corvette that had a block with
a casting date nearly nine (9) months before the assembly of the engine. These
are just two examples of what I suspect are many.
So, my questions here concern the assembly process at Tonawanda, and possibly
other assembly plants, and why some engines have a few days between block
casting dates & assembly dates and others have many months respectively.
Based on the many informative discussions I have been involved in here, I truly
believe Corvette owners tend to be the keepers of such information. Few other
forums seem to be concerned about topics such as this. Now that I have buttered
your bread, I would like to open this topic up to dicusssion.
Can anyone tell me the process ( roughly ) involved with casting the cylinder
blocks and how that related to the assembly process? I have a fairly good idea
about how the blocks were machined, but I don't have much information about
the block casting process itself. Where exactly were the blocks cast? How
were raw blocks ( un-machined ) delivered to the assembly plant(s)? By train,
truck, etc.? How long did this "delivery" process take?
Did blocks just sit around in racks ( or pallets ) waiting to be assembled?
Could some blocks have been pushed to the back of the stack just based on
physical location? What else could possibly account for a date variance of 6
or 9 months in the engine assembly process?
As many of you well know, we "play" in a hobby that has a lot of popular wisdom
applied to it. Popular wisdom referes to commonly held beliefs. As one that
has been involved in production for many years, I know that nothing is ever cast
in stone and that most manufacturing facilities rarely throw usable items away.
Indeed, the saying, "The General didn't throw anything away" has been stated
many times to me. As a matter of fact, I first heard this from a long-time,
multiple Corvette owner.
Steve
I have long been interested in the discrepancies found between a particular
engines assembly date and the casting date of its cylinder block. The years
of production I am mostly interested in here would be from 1967 to 1972.
I personally own an L/78 engine that I purchased from its original owner and
the spread between the blocks casting date and the engines assembly date is
nearly six (6) months. I know this is a stretch by most standards. Recently,
I learned of a fellow with a late production '68 Corvette that had a block with
a casting date nearly nine (9) months before the assembly of the engine. These
are just two examples of what I suspect are many.
So, my questions here concern the assembly process at Tonawanda, and possibly
other assembly plants, and why some engines have a few days between block
casting dates & assembly dates and others have many months respectively.
Based on the many informative discussions I have been involved in here, I truly
believe Corvette owners tend to be the keepers of such information. Few other
forums seem to be concerned about topics such as this. Now that I have buttered
your bread, I would like to open this topic up to dicusssion.
Can anyone tell me the process ( roughly ) involved with casting the cylinder
blocks and how that related to the assembly process? I have a fairly good idea
about how the blocks were machined, but I don't have much information about
the block casting process itself. Where exactly were the blocks cast? How
were raw blocks ( un-machined ) delivered to the assembly plant(s)? By train,
truck, etc.? How long did this "delivery" process take?
Did blocks just sit around in racks ( or pallets ) waiting to be assembled?
Could some blocks have been pushed to the back of the stack just based on
physical location? What else could possibly account for a date variance of 6
or 9 months in the engine assembly process?
As many of you well know, we "play" in a hobby that has a lot of popular wisdom
applied to it. Popular wisdom referes to commonly held beliefs. As one that
has been involved in production for many years, I know that nothing is ever cast
in stone and that most manufacturing facilities rarely throw usable items away.
Indeed, the saying, "The General didn't throw anything away" has been stated
many times to me. As a matter of fact, I first heard this from a long-time,
multiple Corvette owner.
Steve
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