The 5/8” heater hose fitting I removed from the front of the intake manifold on my ‘66 L79 has been put in my collection of parts to be cleaned up and zinc/cad replated. Invariably it takes me a long time to accumulate enough parts to justify sending things to a player. So in the meantime I want to install a repro fitting that may wind up being used for several years. The fitting in question is indicated by part #13 in this drawing from the Long Island Corvette Catalog.
The next set of images shows my original heater hose fitting (which I believe is original to the car) along with two reproduction hose fittings. In the series of images, my original is always at the left. The fitting at the center is one I purchased from Corvette Central, which they say is for ‘75-‘82 with AC. I bought the CC fitting since it looked most similar to my original fitting. The fitting at the right is one I purchased from Long Island Corvette, which the LIC catalog said is the correct one for my engine. All three have 1/2” NPT on the intake manifold end, and they all accept a 5/8” heater hose on the hose end. But the repros differ in other ways.
The ID dimensions of the three fittings are:
ID intake manifold end; ID heater hose end
Original GM 0.46”; 0.39”
Corvette Central 0.46”; 0.31”
LIC; 0.53”; 0.53”
As you can see, the original fitting has a smaller ID on the hose end than on the intake manifold end. The Corvette Central fitting does also, but the hose end ID is 21% smaller than the original. The LIC fitting has the same ID from end to end, but it is 1.75” long, whereas my original and the Corvette Central fitting are both 1,5” long. I’d rather not use the LIC fitting since the extra length of the LIC fitting is on the pipe thread end, and it would be obvious to anyone who knows the length of the original that the LIC fitting is too long when installed.
The reduced hose end ID of the Corvette Central filing translates into a reduced flow area of 37%. My question is, does that represent a problem? It seems like it would restrict heater hose flow, and might increase the temperature of the heater core water. Just guessing about that, Or should I drill it out, which of course would remove the zinc plating and add to corrosion.
Thanks
The next set of images shows my original heater hose fitting (which I believe is original to the car) along with two reproduction hose fittings. In the series of images, my original is always at the left. The fitting at the center is one I purchased from Corvette Central, which they say is for ‘75-‘82 with AC. I bought the CC fitting since it looked most similar to my original fitting. The fitting at the right is one I purchased from Long Island Corvette, which the LIC catalog said is the correct one for my engine. All three have 1/2” NPT on the intake manifold end, and they all accept a 5/8” heater hose on the hose end. But the repros differ in other ways.
Hose End
A787CEA4-3782-491B-8E07-E4EE6930B3BA.jpg
Intake Manifold End
DB4EBE2C-A198-419D-A0F3-314FD7221D6F.jpg
93093121-E9D3-4FDC-B2B6-F1D0F6160E6F.jpg
Lengths
015706CA-BA65-49E3-A67C-8E486AB7C2F4.jpg
A787CEA4-3782-491B-8E07-E4EE6930B3BA.jpg
Intake Manifold End
DB4EBE2C-A198-419D-A0F3-314FD7221D6F.jpg
93093121-E9D3-4FDC-B2B6-F1D0F6160E6F.jpg
Lengths
015706CA-BA65-49E3-A67C-8E486AB7C2F4.jpg
The ID dimensions of the three fittings are:
ID intake manifold end; ID heater hose end
Original GM 0.46”; 0.39”
Corvette Central 0.46”; 0.31”
LIC; 0.53”; 0.53”
As you can see, the original fitting has a smaller ID on the hose end than on the intake manifold end. The Corvette Central fitting does also, but the hose end ID is 21% smaller than the original. The LIC fitting has the same ID from end to end, but it is 1.75” long, whereas my original and the Corvette Central fitting are both 1,5” long. I’d rather not use the LIC fitting since the extra length of the LIC fitting is on the pipe thread end, and it would be obvious to anyone who knows the length of the original that the LIC fitting is too long when installed.
The reduced hose end ID of the Corvette Central filing translates into a reduced flow area of 37%. My question is, does that represent a problem? It seems like it would restrict heater hose flow, and might increase the temperature of the heater core water. Just guessing about that, Or should I drill it out, which of course would remove the zinc plating and add to corrosion.
Thanks
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