67 SB Coupe with A/C upgrade - NCRS Discussion Boards

67 SB Coupe with A/C upgrade

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  • Tom R.
    Extremely Frequent Poster
    • June 30, 1993
    • 4081

    67 SB Coupe with A/C upgrade

    Among my many NCRS memberships, I'm also a member of our local Corvette club which is non-NCRS and proud of it. But we also have a Classic Car Club (muscle car types) and ran into a member of the Corvette club (weekly drive-in hosted by classic car club) sporting a 67 marina blue four-speed smallblock with deletes...like radio. Car used to be dragged raced than restored and sold as a driver.

    My curiosity is this...he wants to install vintage air (a wife thing). He's got the aluminum radiator (or looks like) along with the surge tank. I pointed out to him that 67 air Corvettes came with brass radiator (i'm assuming based on my 68 knowledge) and he may wish to consider an upgrade to radiator to increase cooling capacity if he intends to add air.

    So...what's the story. Upgrade the radiator and run it like it is?
    Tom Russo

    78 SA NCRS 5 Star Bowtie
    78 Pace Car L82 M21
    00 MY/TR/Conv
  • Kevin M.
    Expired
    • November 1, 2000
    • 1271

    #2
    Re: 67 SB Coupe with A/C upgrade

    Run it like it is, aluminum cools better. Jerry F will chime in soon he loves his vintage air and Top Flighted with it on his car.

    Kevin

    Comment

    • Kevin M.
      Expired
      • November 1, 2000
      • 1271

      #3
      Re: 67 SB Coupe with A/C upgrade

      Run it like it is, aluminum cools better. Jerry F will chime in soon he loves his vintage air and Top Flighted with it on his car.

      Kevin

      Comment

      • Gerard F.
        Extremely Frequent Poster
        • June 30, 2004
        • 3803

        #4
        Re: 67 SB Coupe with A/C upgrade

        Tom,

        If he is not having heating problems now, tell him to run it like it is. I have a vintage air system on my 67 S/B 300 HP with it's original aluminum radiator. Only time I have noticed elevated temperature was in hot weather in bumper to bumper, stop and go traffic. Otherwise, no noticeable difference when just cruising along.

        If your friend orders Vintage Air for a 67, make sure they know it is for a 67.
        They make up special radio side panels for the 67 fresh air pulls (which are still usable independently of the system).

        Hopefully, your friends car is not a heater delete car, as you use the original heater/defrost controls for the vintage air system but replace the heater box with a new heater/AC/fan unit. But they will also sell you the controls.

        Actually it's a pretty slick system, and you lose some but not too many points off on a non-AC car in Flight Judging.

        Hope this helps,

        Jerry Fuccillo
        #42179
        Jerry Fuccillo
        1967 327/300 Convertible since 1968

        Comment

        • Gerard F.
          Extremely Frequent Poster
          • June 30, 2004
          • 3803

          #5
          Re: 67 SB Coupe with A/C upgrade

          Tom,

          If he is not having heating problems now, tell him to run it like it is. I have a vintage air system on my 67 S/B 300 HP with it's original aluminum radiator. Only time I have noticed elevated temperature was in hot weather in bumper to bumper, stop and go traffic. Otherwise, no noticeable difference when just cruising along.

          If your friend orders Vintage Air for a 67, make sure they know it is for a 67.
          They make up special radio side panels for the 67 fresh air pulls (which are still usable independently of the system).

          Hopefully, your friends car is not a heater delete car, as you use the original heater/defrost controls for the vintage air system but replace the heater box with a new heater/AC/fan unit. But they will also sell you the controls.

          Actually it's a pretty slick system, and you lose some but not too many points off on a non-AC car in Flight Judging.

          Hope this helps,

          Jerry Fuccillo
          #42179
          Jerry Fuccillo
          1967 327/300 Convertible since 1968

          Comment

          • John H.
            Beyond Control Poster
            • December 1, 1997
            • 16513

            #6
            Re: 67 SB Coupe with A/C upgrade

            Tom -

            All '67 small-blocks came with the Harrison aluminum stacked-plate radiator, which is as good as it gets for cooling; he shouldn't have any issues with an aftermarket A/C installation in terms of cooling if the system is in good shape. Only the '67 big-blocks had copper/brass radiators (except L-88).

            Comment

            • John H.
              Beyond Control Poster
              • December 1, 1997
              • 16513

              #7
              Re: 67 SB Coupe with A/C upgrade

              Tom -

              All '67 small-blocks came with the Harrison aluminum stacked-plate radiator, which is as good as it gets for cooling; he shouldn't have any issues with an aftermarket A/C installation in terms of cooling if the system is in good shape. Only the '67 big-blocks had copper/brass radiators (except L-88).

              Comment

              • Joe R.
                Extremely Frequent Poster
                • March 1, 2002
                • 1356

                #8
                Re: 67 SB Coupe with A/C upgrade

                Hi John:

                I gather that "everyone" agrees that the aluminum radiator is more efficient than the brass radiator. Do you think that GM's engineers had this view in 1967? If so, why did they choose to use a brass radiator instead of aluminum for the big blocks? Surely they recognized that the big blocks would present more of a cooling load than the small block.

                I realize that the big block brass radiator is physically larger than the small block aluminum radiator, but if the aluminum radiator technology is more efficient I'm surprised that GM didn't just use a larger aluminum radiator for the big blocks.

                This question has always bothered me, and the above thread prompted me to ask you whether you know GM's reasoning behind using brass for the big block radiators.

                Comment

                • Joe R.
                  Extremely Frequent Poster
                  • March 1, 2002
                  • 1356

                  #9
                  Re: 67 SB Coupe with A/C upgrade

                  Hi John:

                  I gather that "everyone" agrees that the aluminum radiator is more efficient than the brass radiator. Do you think that GM's engineers had this view in 1967? If so, why did they choose to use a brass radiator instead of aluminum for the big blocks? Surely they recognized that the big blocks would present more of a cooling load than the small block.

                  I realize that the big block brass radiator is physically larger than the small block aluminum radiator, but if the aluminum radiator technology is more efficient I'm surprised that GM didn't just use a larger aluminum radiator for the big blocks.

                  This question has always bothered me, and the above thread prompted me to ask you whether you know GM's reasoning behind using brass for the big block radiators.

                  Comment

                  • Peter L.
                    Extremely Frequent Poster
                    • May 31, 1983
                    • 1930

                    #10
                    Re: 67 SB Coupe with A/C upgrade

                    Tom - I think it's implicit in everyone's response but just in case, please note that 67 sb Covettes with C60 came originally with the aluminum radiator. Pete

                    Comment

                    • Peter L.
                      Extremely Frequent Poster
                      • May 31, 1983
                      • 1930

                      #11
                      Re: 67 SB Coupe with A/C upgrade

                      Tom - I think it's implicit in everyone's response but just in case, please note that 67 sb Covettes with C60 came originally with the aluminum radiator. Pete

                      Comment

                      • Tom R.
                        Extremely Frequent Poster
                        • June 30, 1993
                        • 4081

                        #12
                        Yes...it's heater delete

                        Thanks guys...yes its heater delete. I'll pass along the comments re controls.
                        Tom Russo

                        78 SA NCRS 5 Star Bowtie
                        78 Pace Car L82 M21
                        00 MY/TR/Conv

                        Comment

                        • Tom R.
                          Extremely Frequent Poster
                          • June 30, 1993
                          • 4081

                          #13
                          Yes...it's heater delete

                          Thanks guys...yes its heater delete. I'll pass along the comments re controls.
                          Tom Russo

                          78 SA NCRS 5 Star Bowtie
                          78 Pace Car L82 M21
                          00 MY/TR/Conv

                          Comment

                          • Gerard F.
                            Extremely Frequent Poster
                            • June 30, 2004
                            • 3803

                            #14
                            Re: Yes...it's heater delete

                            Tom,

                            I think they would still have the holes in the dash with the heater delete, but he'll have to come up with the bezels, knobs and defrost control which are available. Not sure about the hole for the defrost, but they give you a new duct fitting with the kit, as well as new radio side panels.

                            Jerry Fuccillo
                            Jerry Fuccillo
                            1967 327/300 Convertible since 1968

                            Comment

                            • Gerard F.
                              Extremely Frequent Poster
                              • June 30, 2004
                              • 3803

                              #15
                              Re: Yes...it's heater delete

                              Tom,

                              I think they would still have the holes in the dash with the heater delete, but he'll have to come up with the bezels, knobs and defrost control which are available. Not sure about the hole for the defrost, but they give you a new duct fitting with the kit, as well as new radio side panels.

                              Jerry Fuccillo
                              Jerry Fuccillo
                              1967 327/300 Convertible since 1968

                              Comment

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