
Re: 225
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Re: 225
- From: "'D J' via The 1962 to 1965 Mopar Mail List Clubhouse" <1962to1965mopars@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 7 Oct 2014 05:13:47 -0700
Interesting. But even an inch lower can mean the difference between hitting the hood upon closer? And in Australia, they lengthen the bay, are the cars the exact same as the American cars and are you sure they didn't low the front suspension and thus lower the engine mounts, making for more room. Whatever the reason, they slanted it forsome reason. Probably so people like us can debate it to he** freezes over, lol.
DJ
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On Tue, 10/7/14, Ray Bell <raybell46@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Subject: Re: 225
To: 1962to1965mopars@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Date: Tuesday, October 7, 2014, 7:26 AM
That's an
interesting article. It lends weight to the whole idea that
a significant part of the slant's slant was to give room
for an efficient manifold. This is mentioned, as I posted
previously, on the Allpar page referenced by 64ragtop.
I get the impression that many are not so
impressed by my reasonings and suggestions, so I've used
the sectional drawing of the slant from the Allpar page to
make a composite picture that shows the slant slanted at
30° alongside the engine brought back up to the
vertical.
You can clearly see that the height of the engine
effectively doesn't change. Critically, the ports are at
the same height and so the carburettor, the highest point of
the engine, is committed to the same altitude as it would
have been with the engine vertical.
The importance of raw engine height is further
degraded by the fact that the manifold runs uphill from the
ports. And my second pic, also from the Allpar page, shows
clearly how the air cleaner is several inches above the
height of the valve cover and would have remained so if the
engine had been upright.
So we have a PRESS RELEASE that says that engine
height was a reason for the design. This myth, in my view,
is busted.
As far as the slant being to allow the water pump
to be beside the engine is concerned, that's another
product of the fertile minds of the promotional people.
It's not hard to find vertical engines with the water
pump beside the block.
Lower centre of gravity - that is certainly the
case. I would think the centre of gravity of the engine
would have been lowered by anything up to an
inch.
The fourth item on the press release related to
accessibility of the accessories. As has been pointed out,
distributor access isn't good, but pretty much
everything else benefitted from the slant.
Another point in favour of the manifold
efficiency being a major factor is the need for the manifold
to avoid clashing with power boosters and brake master
cylinders.
To further emphasise this, I will point to the
upright design of the Hemi 6 engine with its similar
manifolding. In Australia the power boosters and master
cylinders are on the opposite side of the car so there was
no need to cant the engine. That engine is larger than the
slant, it sits under exactly the same bonnet (hood) as the
slant did in the same car but it is longer because of its
bigger bore. Even so the water pump is not offset, but the
engine bay was lengthened to cope.
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