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69-72 c10 350
How were these C10 truck motors set-up from GM? Were they flat top piston/large chamber heads? Dished piston w/large chamber heads? Dished piston/small chamber heads?
I can't remember when GM started making changes on the truck sbc's for emissions/gas compliance needs. |
Re: 769-72 c10 350
I have no idea as to truck changes compared to passenger vehicles however, 1971 (and later) was the year engines had reduced compression. Head chamber sizes may have changed a couple years before dished pistons?
You may find better info by looking up head castings and the specs. Bob |
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I plan to look @ a factory late 60's early 70's 350/350 C10 pull-out combo to use for a strategic flip scenario. Knowing how these came from GM potentially helps w/the strategy. |
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All 3 of the 350 I have worked on recently have flat top pistons with valve pockets and large chamber heads..they were 71 to 76 engines
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Most of the early truck and passenger 350s I have seen had flat-top pistons with valve reliefs. In fact, I may be wrong, but I don't remember any stock 350s having dished pistons-at least not any I have torn down.
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Thanks for the info as this sort of stuff is exactly what I was curious about. My C10's were 67/8's w/straight 6's. My old '74 had a 350/350. I never cracked open that 350 since it got the job done as-is. I figured if this 350 has flat tops, it should have decent (well, better) compression vs a dished piston/76cc head combo. |
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I think 72 was the first year that the pollution laws started to effect the 350 specs
Any 350 that I ever disassembled before that had flat top pistons with 4 valve reliefs. Only the performance engines got the higher compression heads so most stock 350s would run on regular gas. Of course it was leaded gas and better than today's regular 87 octane. |
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I googled for sbc head data. 76cc/large chamber heads were in production by '71. Prior to that was mostly 64cc stuff.
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Here's what I found in various places:
Truck 327s had 64cc heads, and it looks like some even had 70cc or 76cc. However the only 350 I can find with 64cc heads was the 370hp/LT1 350, used in the Z28 and Corvette. Compression ratio was around 11:1, as I recall. 69-72 passenger car and truck 350s had 70, 75, and 76cc heads. Possibly with flat top pistons but probably with dished. Compression was probably around 9:0, and then may have dropped a little in the early 70s. |
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I know in truck 350s the HP peaked in '70 and by '72 they dropped a lot of HP. I think in '72 what came later had just begun. I see where a 70/71 350 could have 255hp and in '72 it dropped to 175hp max
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Almost 5 years to the day I brought home this 350 I found on the right day from a friend of a friend who was parting out what was left of his project truck that he wrapped around a tree . :chevy:
Originally Posted by bruceman1968 Hey Grump, You got everything you need there to positively identify your block. VI208TBC 3970010 L10 L10 is the casting date L = December 1 = December 1st 0 = 1970 Your block was cast on December 1st 1970 3970010 in 1970(or 1971 see below) is a 350cid. VI208TBC is V1208TBC I's used for 1's is very common when found stamped on Blocks. 1208 = December 8th Your Block was cast December 1st and assembled on December 8th in 1970. Casting Date codes are the day, month and year they say they are, but Suffix codes go by Model Year. Your block is December of 1970 which is the 1971 Model Year. So when you look up TBC you have to do it for 1971. In 1971 TBC = 350cid, 255hp, 350auto, LS9, 4bbl, 10,20 C or K So you have a 1971MY 350 Truck motor. Great price. BTW This thread shows what I found inside . http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=752595 |
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After 5 years of constant project creep I'm still working on it . I've come close to pulling it back out and just to find out what pistons are in it , But I can't tear apart a good running engine . Maybe it's time I bought a bore scope ? :lol:
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If there are actually any left, I'd like to tear apart a previously unmolested 69-70 truck 350 to see piston type, gasket thickness, and actual deck height. You can easily tell combustion chamber volume by removing a valve cover and looking at the casting number.
I say "truck 350" but C20s and C30s may have had smaller camshafts along with lower static compression than C10s, achieved with either dished pistons and/or 76cc chambers. |
Re: 69-72 c10 350
I'm looking for a period correct"ish" 350 for my truck and have been watching this thread closely. So if I'm understanding this right, a mid 70's low compression block was the same as the earlier high compression block, it was just the heads and pistons that changed in the smog era for low compression?
I have a line on a 1974 350 out of a Monte Carlo, if the above is true then maybe I should grab it and put high compression heads on it and flat 1970 pistons and I'm good to go? |
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Just found this at the GM Heritage Center website:
There were several 350s available in 1969. The TurboFire 350 had 9.0:1, 10.25:1, and 8.0:1 compression depending on the vehicle. The 10.25:1 engine was listed as an available option only in the El Camino. The High Torque 350 had 8.0:1 and 9.0:1 compression and was used in HD trucks. Start here with pdf document page#52: https://www.gm.com/content/dam/compa...olet-Truck.pdf You can find all kinds of specs here. |
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Somewhere In my searches I ran into ratings for Gross and Net numbers listed for the same engines, but I forget where that was! One that I think I remember is a 307 was rated 200hp Gross and 155hp Net. |
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