Well, there goes another grand (B.O.A.T. style). I ordered the HD torque converter from Applied (I'm going to keep calling it that I guess). I also ordered a Ragusa triple battery tray. I considered robbing it from my Glenbrook, but I figured I should let the new owner enjoy it instead. That keeps me from needing to spend time rewiring the Glenbrook anyway. While I was spending so much money, it seemed like nothing to throw $25 at a chance to get full-height cockpit sliding windows, so I added that to the cart as well. Add in some new tune-up parts from Rock Auto to finish dressing up the new engine, and we're at another $1k gone.
Funny, my actual boat has never required me to bust out another thousand. It's actually been downright cheap! Maybe I should switch over to AMUs since there are so many aviation guys here.
I digress...
Back to the work: I've started carving up a complete Delphi fuel pump and sender module. It's for some TBI application, and was one of the less expensive ones. If I find a clever way to make it all fit, I'll post part numbers and details (sadly, I think multiple STLs will be involved).
More fiddling with the TBI...
The factory Chevy 454 TBI adapter does a good job adapting from 2-barrel to dual-smushed-pears, but it doesn't adapt well to the Olds 4-barrel IMHO. If you look at the Chevy intake from this application, it has the wide-open spread bore pattern that you often seen on aftermarket intakes, rather than the 4 individual ports.
The Olds pattern also dips inward on the exterior between the primary and secondary, while the Chevy pattern has straighter sides. You can see where this would cause a vacuum leak. I'm also not a fan of those blunt faces in the air stream.

So it looks like I'm making an adapter for the adapter. I could just do the easy thing and drill the two bolt patterns into a piece of plate, forgo the Chevy adapter, and focus on lining up the secondaries. But, looking at things in-hand, I can't help but feel the front cylinders would balance just a bit better if I can make a smoother airflow transition. Plus, using the Chevy adapter comes with the added benefit of having engine coolant piped all around the throttle body area. Chevy did that for a reason, and with my exhaust crossover 110% blocked off, it sounds like a good idea. So I put craft paint on the carb mounting surface, pressed it into a manila folder, scanned it on a flatbed scanner with a precise ruler, adjusted for scaling errors, modeled up a thin plate in Onshape and printed it out in PETG. It fits pretty good!

The bolt holes lined up, and the front of the primary and rear of the secondary ports lined up with the Chevy adapter too. Now to do some extruding/lofting/drafting/whatever to make the two patterns transition better. I think I'll target about 1/2-5/8" total thickness depending on how all the angles look. I might cast it out of aluminum later, but I'm curious to see how the PETG fares.