RE: [Chrysler300] Big Red
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

RE: [Chrysler300] Big Red



Thanks Carl..makes sense…!!  John

 

From: C Bilter [mailto:cbilter@xxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2015 3:01 PM
To: Anna F Noia; John Grady; 'Mike Zagata'; 'Tony Rinaldi'; Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Chrysler300] Big Red

 

All:  The 400hp F manifolds are not the same as the J/K headers.  They look similar, but do not have provisions for exhaust heat tubes.  The carbs were water heated.  Same with 400hp G and 405hp H.  

 

300Jly,

Carl Bilter

 

From: mailto:Chrysler300-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 

Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2015 1:34 PM

To: John Grady <mailto:jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>  ; 'Mike Zagata' <mailto:mzagata@xxxxxxxxxxx>  ; 'Tony Rinaldi' <mailto:awrdoc@xxxxxxxxx>  ; Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 

Subject: Re: [Chrysler300] Big Red

 

  

I'm not sure on the 405 F manifolds, but I do have the K exhaust manifolds and they are very different than the early long rams exhaust manifolds (log style). The J and K look similar to a 426 hemi cast manifold. They drop down, and back. with a four bolt hook up to the exhaust pipes. Sort of like the Max Wedge, except way down next to the transmission, not up against the firewall. The Max wedge exhaust manifolds went up and back, attached to the exhaust pipe at the firewall, then down and out to another 4 bolt cut out below the door, just before that cut out the piping went back to the mufflers and out the back. I loved that system on my 63 sport fury convertible. Anyway back to the J & K exhaust manifolds, I think they are the same, like I said I have the K style. They each have connection pipes to the "Short" long rams below the carb's, correct. Are these short pipes available from someone? One for the heat to the intake manifold the other for the heat return from the intake to the exhaust system. They both attach to the exhaust manifolds at various points along their length. I have the remains of one capped pipe and welded flanges on the remaining connections to the manifolds. I hope someone has these pipes available, if not, then a picture of them installed or not. I'm not sure if this question/request is on topic or not, I hope it's at least sort of on Topic "Exhaust Manifolds, etc...". I do need anyone's assistance that can help. Thanks in advance

Best Regards,
Stephen A. Noia
1-408-210-4736 cell

 

 

On Tuesday, May 26, 2015 8:06 AM, "'John Grady' jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [Chrysler300]" <Chrysler300-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

 

  

Read that article, seemed to be more than a few errors in the article, not the car? It looks like it has/had  a 405 F engine, in essence—and talks about  starting as a 61 changed to a 62? Are they not different wheelbases? Not sure of that, maybe someone did it? . But really nice job bringing that back. Thank you !!

 

Are 405 F exhaust manifolds the same as ram j, k?  Same as this? It seemed to me the 405 F engine was almost a hand built prototype for later 390 HP cars…I often wondered about exhaust manifolds in those years,  have no personal experience, beyond observing stock ram exhaust manifold  not very good.  Those 405 manifolds , the ideas anyway, probably later evolved to huge max wedge “up and over” castings  

 

I have written before on this site of vivid personal memories in 1962 of the Hot Rod Magazine spl 300 getting into the high 12’s , turning the fastest time of all ‘stock” cars at whatever BIG meet it was..faster than all of them , dozens of 421 poncho, 425 409 (and forget 406 etc fords, at that point). Not sure if rams, might have been same engine as big red? 

 

The reason it is so clear is the place I hung around , Donuts Please/Big Burger ranch (in Cambridge, Ma ..every night was like American Graffiti, drags from midnight on,  on route 2E at Lake st..; often 20 cars. We even had a painted line. That place was populated by about 25 60-62 Chevy guys, 1 61 or 62 ford, 4 or 5 57 chevs, a few 60-62 corvettes , some hot rods (including a 56 Plymouth “stock” convert  with a 413)---  (the  62 2dr Chev coupes with 327 or 409 were common) ---and me . I had a 300D 392 in a 57 D500 convert, Packard OD,  3;70’s, Velvetouch metallic disc, oil truck 11” 3800 lb  clutch./ —after blowing up two 325 D 500 factory stick hemis –they threw rods. ( 56-61 mopar trans column stick with pin syncros  is pure junk, another story)  . I did OK, best capture was a new 421 Pontiac tri power Ventura coupe. But could not match 425 409, w 4;56 . 

 

Anyway,, that year a big heavy 300 turned the lowest time of any stock car, maybe 12.9 , at Nationals, I rubbed it in,  on all those chevy guys like crazy. And it was an automatic!! ( the NEW aluminum 727!)  The first time ever an automatic had a faster time than a “stock” 4 spd stick , after it was all over ; early 727 62 racing automatics were unreal, really hard shifts, throttle type “detent” kick down, no dumb part throttle 3-2 downshifts----- later softened up. Would spin on 5-5500 rpm1-2 shift, like later J-K , but 57-62 body has far better traction than J-K at drags.. ( I had both..J spins really easy) 

 

Ha!! “an automatic Chrysler kicked yo poor chevy 4 spd  ass! “   

 

But the Chrysler did not win, because the guy was asleep on the line at the FINAL  run, against a Pontiac, --Chrysler turned the faster time but lost. Shortly after this, the smaller body cars took all this over..

 

To get a full size 300 from the normal 15’s into the 12’s is simply unreal. I think Ray Brock of HRM  was doing it..at the end running a cam over 290 degrees. We need to remember how that HRM car impacted a whole generation in 62-63 —including me ..the Daytona beach high speed runs were fading in 62, but a fast street quarter miler held everyone’s attention. No longer were 300’s known as “fast on the top end,  but dogs off the line” . 

 

Beach boys songs etc,-- 409, Jan and Dean’s Deadman’s curve, Granny’s superstock 413, little deuce coupe…etc etc set the tone 

 

By the way, fastest car in Cambridge/Boston  in those days was a 50 olds with 59 J2 394 olds hydrostick, 4:11 ( rumors it was stroked to 450 or so) , but way cool: it had center of tri carbs on gasoline, end carbs on methanol. He would put 2 lengths on anyone off the line with that 4:1 first gear in hydrostick..  50 Olds suspension ideal for dragging, long converging C channel bars rigid  from axle to trans U joint cross member . Some GM pickups have that too from this period. Car raises straight up, no spin, goes like hell. That guy was very smart….unbeatable on street. 2nd fastest was 55 T bird with 430” Lincoln in it. Could not get power to the ground. (typical of ford wheel hop) , often started in 2nd gear. 

 

In 63 one night a 426 beige Dodge 2 dr showed up,  3 speed stick. Max wedge , 4 bolt dumps and all, no back seat, I think fiberglass bumpers etc killed the fastest 13.1 sec chevy. Great days for MOPAR. I won 150$. Must have been 100- 150 guys watching this at 3AM, lot of $ bet, on route 3 north straight from 128 on ramp. 425 hp Chev blew up at top of third, about 6 feet behind Dodge, which was still in 2nd (~ 3;70) . Still remember 425 hp chevy headlights  jumping up and down at shifts..

 

Someone needs to make that HRM special again..and race it in nostalgia stock. …Do all the Chevies in , ----yet again..

 

From: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of 'Mike Zagata' mzagata@xxxxxxxxxxx [Chrysler300]
Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2015 8:59 AM
To: 'Tony Rinaldi'; Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: [Chrysler300] Big Red

 





There is a 300B race car that many may not be aware of.  It was raced each week at Fonda Raceway in Fonda, NY (place where Shirley Muldowny started).  It was raced by  Mr. Shultis from Halcottsville, NY in “A” stock automatic and won its class each week for several years.  Mr. Shultis sold the car to Don Garlits and it resides in Don’s drag racing museum in Ocala, FL.  It may well be the most successful Chrysler 300 in existence.  Mike

 

From: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Tony Rinaldi awrdoc@xxxxxxxxx [Chrysler300]
Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2015 7:50 AM
To: ldmiklas@xxxxxxxxxxx; chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: [Chrysler300] Big Red

 


"Big Red" will be one of two 300 Race Cars featured at the 60th Anniversary Macungie Meet. 


Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone <https://yho.com/footer0> 

 

At May 25, 2015, 9:22:12 PM, ldmiklas@xxxxxxxxxxx [Chrysler300]Chrysler300-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx'> wrote: 

This months MOPAR COLLECTOR'S GUIDE (July2015) has an interesting article on BIG RED - Bud Faubel's record breaking '62 300 - now totally restored by Jim Kramer. Check it out!

Jeff Miklas

 





 





[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------
Posted by: "John Grady" <jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
------------------------------------

To send a message to this group, send an email to:
Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to bob@xxxxxxxxxxxxx or
go to https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/all/manage/edit

For list server instructions, go to http://www.chrysler300club.com/yahoolist/inst.htm

For archives go to http://www.forwardlook.net/300-archive/search.htm#querylang
------------------------------------

Yahoo Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Chrysler300/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Chrysler300/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    Chrysler300-digest@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 
    Chrysler300-fullfeatured@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    Chrysler300-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

<*> Your use of Yahoo Groups is subject to:
    https://info.yahoo.com/legal/us/yahoo/utos/terms/



Home Back to the Home of the Forward Look Network Archive Sitemap


Copyright © The Forward Look Network. All rights reserved.

Opinions expressed in posts reflect the views of their respective authors.
This site contains affiliate links for which we may be compensated.