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Old 07-15-2016, 05:00 PM
red67 red67 is offline
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Default Re: Tonawanda small block?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: bergy</div><div class="ubbcode-body">The &quot;conv&quot; designations were permanently part of the patterns when they were made. They reflected the planned casting conveyor when the pattern was made (could have been years earlier). They were not &quot;tags&quot; like the date codes &amp; didn't represent which line the mold was actually made on. Remember the rule of thumb - iron patterns (which these were) typically lasted 100,000 molds before refurbishing. Aluminum patterns lasted 10,000 molds. Your block was cast off of pattern #11 in that family of patterns - which could have been in production for a long time.

the casting lines were

Line 1 - M4 Blocks

Line 2 - small blocks

Line 3 - M4 heads and all intakes

Line 4 - small block heads

Line 5 - water pumps, oil pumps, bearing caps, &amp; misc. lower volume parts

Line 6 - same as line 5

Line 7 - was removed in early '60s

Line 8 - all brake drums </div></div>

Is this mold, T11, only used for casting 352 as the casting number is also not a tag? Mold T11 for casting 352. My understanding is that casting 352 was used for 327 and 350 in 1967 only so this block could have had a very limited production run. Alvin Colvin in his book states that he is not sure when this casting was used and thought it was a limited run used late in the model year but the September 1966 casting dates are wrong for that. I believe that Tonawanda stepped up small block production in the fall of 1966 because there was a shortage of the new 350 engine then. In the fall of 1966 you could not buy an over the counter 350 engine or parts. You could only get a 350 engine via warranty and a serial number had to be provided to the parts system. This is stated in GM docs from the era.
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