Plugs ?
AC 45 gapped to .030 according to Carnut.com which I trust.
http://www.carnut.com/specs/gen/olds60.html
AC R43S according to Fusick Olds which I both trust and have pleasantly dealt with.
http://www.fusickautomotiveproducts....s.asp?dept=703
Why the difference ? My guess is the R43S is the modern more readily available equivalent. As it does make the Carnut list but only as early as 1969 ...
I would still verify before proceeding.
http://www.carnut.com/specs/gen/olds60.html
AC R43S according to Fusick Olds which I both trust and have pleasantly dealt with.
http://www.fusickautomotiveproducts....s.asp?dept=703
Why the difference ? My guess is the R43S is the modern more readily available equivalent. As it does make the Carnut list but only as early as 1969 ...
I would still verify before proceeding.
Use the 45 or other brand equivalent. If you get detonation on 93 octane then use the 44. The 43 is a cold plug which likely won't burn off deposits in normal driving.
There's a tech bulletin from 1965 addressing this. Recommends use of the 43 only in Starfire 394 engines regularly seeing high speed or hard acceleration service. Course there was 100 octane leaded fuel available back then too.
There's a tech bulletin from 1965 addressing this. Recommends use of the 43 only in Starfire 394 engines regularly seeing high speed or hard acceleration service. Course there was 100 octane leaded fuel available back then too.
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