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Re: Gmc V12 in trucks
Just shoot me a private message the day before or a couple hours before.
I REALLY like the looks of that L7000!. I'll bring my camera! |
Re: Gmc V12 in trucks
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Re: Gmc V12 in trucks
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Re: Gmc V12 in trucks
As I was reading over the posts in this thread, I was reminded of a story my late father told about this engine. During the '60s, my family was the GMC dealer in Cullman, Alabama. Not only was the dealership a light/medium duty dealer, but the dealership was also a designated heavy duty repair station for both gas & diesel engines. In '62 or'63, dad was called out on a service call to repair a B7000-V12 truck at a local truck stop on north US 31(no interstate highways). This particular truck had tuning problems, being that previous mechanics had not properly tuned the engine. Dad re-tuned the engine, re-run the overhead, set the carburetors and timing, all the while being strung out underneath the cab of the truck. The owner said upon starting the engine after dad finished that was the best that engine had ever run. Dad said it took someone who had factory training (at that time) to properly tune these engines. BTW, my dad had over 30 certificates of training from GM Institute during the time we had GMC.
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Re: Gmc V12 in trucks
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A word of Warning! V-12s are addictive! First, V12s are fast becoming extinct. Only built from 60-66. If a person can get one running regardless of use, you have a automotive living, breathing dinosaur. The engines were very durable, and I like the unique design. The "twin-six" came from the fact GMC used all components from the 351, hence, 702, Twin six on one block, crank, camshaft, ignition, and oil pan. All other parts are inter-changeable. Many were used here in the plains states on Ag. irrigation wells. and burned natural gas. I worked for the farmer and cared for the motor that's in the '46 Chev. when it was new in '65. It pumped 2200 gal a minute for 22 years with one overhaul bored .30 over. When we checked them at night, the exhaust manifolds would be glowing cherry red. If there was a weak cylinder, the manifold would have a darker spot at that one than the rest. I keep it in our metal shop. When people come with smaller kids to see it, I'll start it up, let it warm a little, then gradually start speeding it up. When the metal on the shop starts to rumble about 2100, close the throttle real quick, and then back-fires, blowing fire out the 4 exhaust pipes, that's when the stampede starts for the door. It doesn't take much to keep an ol' retired farmer entertained, Huh, Rap-em-Pappy? |
Re: Gmc V12 in trucks
Hi Coyoterun and powerstroke, Just give us old farm kids a wrench and
a old truck.....Just like a duck in water having fun. Yes, I took old Rap'em Pappy for a road trip to Lexington, Ky. There was a Goodguys show at of all places, Kentucky Horse Park. You might say I was just horsing around. This is a 1200 acre horse playground. With horses worth more than any vehicles there. With up 2000 vehicles there, NOT one other GMC V6, only my V12. I always get asked about gas mileage. But I always tell them,,,about 25 to 30 thumbs up per gallon. :welldone: |
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The first time it happened it sure scared the heck out of me. |
Re: Gmc V12 in trucks
Rap'em Pappy - Sounds like a FUN weekend. Pretty country around Lexington, Ky. My sister went to U of K there for a couple years. It's just crazy what horses are worth isn't it?
I hope you run into Dennis Gage sometime at a car show with Rap'em Pappy. I'd like to see him speechless on TV! He would be familiar with the stock truck. SON went thru his mid-life crisis this summer. Traded his '14 Ram 2500 CTD off on a '18 Mustang GT with Performance Pkg #2, Recaro seats, Big Brembo brakes, Big sticky Pirelli tires, 305-40x19 I think. 460+ hp, 6 spd manual trans. All kinds of electronic stuff like Launch control, RPM matching for each shift, twin disk clutch. Anyhow, he still needs a truck. So I gave him my '96 F-250. He pulls his Mustang up to the gas pump a few people look but don't say anything. He pulls my old truck up to the pump and a crowd forms! It's kinda ticking him off! Just proves Trucks are COOL! |
Re: Gmc V12 in trucks
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Since on wells, the motors ran a constant speed, we'd tune them at night and use the exhaust as a guide. With the stub pipes on each head, blue flame would be at the pipe tips, so we could tune each distributor on each side of the motor, by tuning in each distributor to max blue flame. |
Re: Gmc V12 in trucks
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I don't know why it didn't blow the Mufflers apart. Maybe because they were Straight-Thru Duals ?? |
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