'73 455
Does it turn freely without binding?
Oil in it that does not look spotless like it was just added or changed.
Do the cylinder heads match? The one pictured is a J.
Freeze plugs in place, any popped?
Pull the spark plugs and look at their condition.
Look at the raised casting number behind the water pump next to the oil fill tube to confirm it is a 455.
Pull a valve cover to have a look.
Look on the pad on the block below the #1 spark plugs for stamped #'s and letters.
Oil in it that does not look spotless like it was just added or changed.
Do the cylinder heads match? The one pictured is a J.
Freeze plugs in place, any popped?
Pull the spark plugs and look at their condition.
Look at the raised casting number behind the water pump next to the oil fill tube to confirm it is a 455.
Pull a valve cover to have a look.
Look on the pad on the block below the #1 spark plugs for stamped #'s and letters.
Last edited by Sugar Bear; May 26, 2024 at 03:12 PM.
Does it turn freely without binding?
Oil in it that does not look spotless like it was just added or changed.
Do the cylinder heads match? The one pictured is a J.
Freeze plugs in place, any popped?
Pull the spark plugs and look at their condition.
Look at the raised casting number behind the water pump next to the oil fill tube to confirm it is a 455.
Pull a valve cover to have a look.
Look on the pad on the block below the #1 spark plugs for stamped #'s and letters.
Oil in it that does not look spotless like it was just added or changed.
Do the cylinder heads match? The one pictured is a J.
Freeze plugs in place, any popped?
Pull the spark plugs and look at their condition.
Look at the raised casting number behind the water pump next to the oil fill tube to confirm it is a 455.
Pull a valve cover to have a look.
Look on the pad on the block below the #1 spark plugs for stamped #'s and letters.
Look for steel shim head gaskets, if present the heads were probably never off the engine. If they were off it may have been bored.
If you can look in through the fuel pump mounting hole into the front cover cavity and see a nylon tooth timing gear it is a safe bet it has not been bored. A cell phone borescope is useful for this inspection and to look into the cylinders for corrosion and/or wall scoring.
If you can look in through the fuel pump mounting hole into the front cover cavity and see a nylon tooth timing gear it is a safe bet it has not been bored. A cell phone borescope is useful for this inspection and to look into the cylinders for corrosion and/or wall scoring.
Look for steel shim head gaskets, if present the heads were probably never off the engine. If they were off it may have been bored.
If you can look in through the fuel pump mounting hole into the front cover cavity and see a nylon tooth timing gear it is a safe bet it has not been bored. A cell phone borescope is useful for this inspection and to look into the cylinders for corrosion and/or wall scoring.
If you can look in through the fuel pump mounting hole into the front cover cavity and see a nylon tooth timing gear it is a safe bet it has not been bored. A cell phone borescope is useful for this inspection and to look into the cylinders for corrosion and/or wall scoring.
This is my maiden voyage for inspecting a used Olds engine out of the vehicle not running. Much appreciated info. Thanks again.
If the water pump looks to be a replacement, may be a good chance the timing chain's been replaced at some point as well.
the script valve covers are later-model I believe - '74 or 5 I think, maybe someone else with more knowledge on that will advise
as noted above, make sure both sides have J heads, that would increase your odds the motor's largely untouched inside
I had a '73 that I ditched the J heads from for a set of untouched 1970 big-valve E heads (442 heads) - that was part of my plan for building it though then I went a different direction and sold the block but kept the E heads....
the script valve covers are later-model I believe - '74 or 5 I think, maybe someone else with more knowledge on that will advise
as noted above, make sure both sides have J heads, that would increase your odds the motor's largely untouched inside
I had a '73 that I ditched the J heads from for a set of untouched 1970 big-valve E heads (442 heads) - that was part of my plan for building it though then I went a different direction and sold the block but kept the E heads....
Last edited by 70sgeek; May 26, 2024 at 06:50 PM.
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