Hey Arch! I talked to Joe Mondello from California yesterday about getting a
455 engine from him. Wanted to talk about the specs of the engine. First
question he asked is what version of GMC motorhome engine do you want.
Stumped me! Seem his regular engine with lots of goodies develops 500HP and
goes for $10K. The one for $6200 he quoted me earlier was for a plain jane
stock 455. He says he is selling these 500HP versions as fast as he can make
them. Even just shipped one to Australia.
Here we are talking about patching up distorted exhaust manifolds and there
are GMC's running around with 500HP motors in them. anyone say one yet?
He told me that just adding the new aluminum Edelbrock heads adds 150HP to
the standard engine. Heads cost $1395 a pair.
>Terry
>
>It is so nice to see Someone remember Colin Chapman. He was good!
>A lot of suspension stuff goes back to him. That was my Bible when
>I was building fun toys. I agree this aint no race car. The problem
>is: a whole lot of us want it to be our fantasy race car------the one
>we never had. After all it does have a legendary engine. A big one too.
>The trick is to separate fantasy and reality. Never easy here.
>
>Take Care
>Arch
>>
>> In the late 50's a gentleman by the name of Colin Chapman wrote a book on
>> suspension in racing cars. Facinating reading. But basically speaking the
>> only
>> purpose of a swaybar is to keep the car level through a corner. If you
>> increase the
>> diameter (front) or add one (or two) to the rear it will stop some of the
>> sway.
>> But now you have a situation where if the left wheel drops into a hole the
>> vehicle
>> pitches to the left. If we are blessed with highways and no chuck holes, we
>> would go for the biggest bars we could find. Or if used off road, we would
>> use the
>> smallest diameter sway bar or none at all.
>> The purpose for having one in the front and not in the rear is to create a
>> situation called
>> roll-steer.The engineers designed this into the GMC to keep the effort at
>> the steering
>> wheel the same through a variety of corners and speeds, all of which is a
>> compromise.
>> The bottom line is this an't no race car. Slow down and enjoy the scenery.
>>
>> Just my two and one-half cents worth
>> Terry Skinner
>
>
Tom & Marg Warner
Vernon Center NY
1976 palmbeach
455 engine from him. Wanted to talk about the specs of the engine. First
question he asked is what version of GMC motorhome engine do you want.
Stumped me! Seem his regular engine with lots of goodies develops 500HP and
goes for $10K. The one for $6200 he quoted me earlier was for a plain jane
stock 455. He says he is selling these 500HP versions as fast as he can make
them. Even just shipped one to Australia.
Here we are talking about patching up distorted exhaust manifolds and there
are GMC's running around with 500HP motors in them. anyone say one yet?
He told me that just adding the new aluminum Edelbrock heads adds 150HP to
the standard engine. Heads cost $1395 a pair.
>Terry
>
>It is so nice to see Someone remember Colin Chapman. He was good!
>A lot of suspension stuff goes back to him. That was my Bible when
>I was building fun toys. I agree this aint no race car. The problem
>is: a whole lot of us want it to be our fantasy race car------the one
>we never had. After all it does have a legendary engine. A big one too.
>The trick is to separate fantasy and reality. Never easy here.
>
>Take Care
>Arch
>>
>> In the late 50's a gentleman by the name of Colin Chapman wrote a book on
>> suspension in racing cars. Facinating reading. But basically speaking the
>> only
>> purpose of a swaybar is to keep the car level through a corner. If you
>> increase the
>> diameter (front) or add one (or two) to the rear it will stop some of the
>> sway.
>> But now you have a situation where if the left wheel drops into a hole the
>> vehicle
>> pitches to the left. If we are blessed with highways and no chuck holes, we
>> would go for the biggest bars we could find. Or if used off road, we would
>> use the
>> smallest diameter sway bar or none at all.
>> The purpose for having one in the front and not in the rear is to create a
>> situation called
>> roll-steer.The engineers designed this into the GMC to keep the effort at
>> the steering
>> wheel the same through a variety of corners and speeds, all of which is a
>> compromise.
>> The bottom line is this an't no race car. Slow down and enjoy the scenery.
>>
>> Just my two and one-half cents worth
>> Terry Skinner
>
>
Tom & Marg Warner
Vernon Center NY
1976 palmbeach