Hi Kidz,
After that article was published in the "Corvette Restorer", I emailed the person who wrote it ... This may be of some interest to you.
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My letter to Everett Ogilvie:
I enjoyed your article in the recent Corvette Restorer titled "A Study of the 450-HP L72" ... Very well written! Unfortunately, I don't have any proof positive info to provide you ... But I do have an observation to relate. Forgive me if this is something old and has been referenced before ... I'm not into the details on the '66 as I once was.
If you have a moment, please head over to a website I made several years ago and click on item #14 on this page:
http://www.corvette.net/mags.htm
This engine compartment image is a scan from the March 1966 Motor Trend article. I'm presuming it was taken several months before and the issue was released a few months prior to March (like current magazines). Couple thingz to note:
1) This article is based on a '66 L72 Vette
2) The article sayz the HP rating is 425 (but that could have been changed before going to print)
3) Although there was nothing clipped off the image during the scan, the hood support bracket doesn't seem to be on the drivers side (as you noted on early Vettes).
4) And to my eye, the air cleaner cover appears to be *BLACK* ... Like it was left over from the '65 396 engine. Furthermore, I don't see a second decal with the advertised HP rating. I've alwayz wondered about this oddity ... Has it ever been addressed before?
Ciao,
Jack Morocco
PS- Full text from the article can be seen on another website:
http://www.corvettearchive.com/images/1966/MTMar66/_1966-427-p1.jpg
http://www.corvettearchive.com/images/1966/MTMar66/_1966-427-p2.jpg
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His reply:
Thanks for contacting me. The engine photo is very interesting - the lid definitely looks black, and with no HP sticker. I had one guy contact me about a yellow early car that had a black lid and no HP sticker. This car was yellow/black with sidepipes and VIN 7XX.
About the hood props - in general only the early cars had the prop on the passenger side. Depending on whether the body was built at A.O. Smith or at St. Louis, there might be discrepancies on how long one plant used the early hood with the prop on the passenger side. It looks like A.O. Smith bodies may have used that setup later than St. Louis bodies.
I like your web site - I came across it several years ago and have visited it many times. Nice job.
Everett