1968 bumper scoops
1968 bumper scoops
Looking to add air induction to my 68 cutlass I have everything and assembly manual but documentation is not the best does anyone have or know where I can get some good instructions for proper placement of brackets and scoops thanks
I was at the Olds show in Dayton not long ago and noticed that of the OEM (original) scoops for sale, most had some tire damage from owners putting larger tires on which rubbed holes in the intake scoops. I guess the factory didn’t figure on owners putting bigger tires on as part of their scoop design specification.
You can get reproductions of these scoops from “The Parts Place”. I’ve run them for a few years on my ‘66 Starfire. I like them, but they don’t make any difference I can feel in the driver’s seat. Maybe mileage is up half an MPG. Maybe power is up a tick. I’ve never really A/B tested.
The reproduction scoops are accurate, but I found them a little long (fore-aft) for my ‘66 big car with oversize tires. Also you’ll have to make your own mounting brackets which is a slight pain.
Not too long ago I upgraded my tires & found that removing the frontmost 1.5” or so from the scoops eliminated the problem of oversize tire interference. Unless you go with NOS/OEM parts, consider doing this just so everything works right.
Have a look for posts in the last month or 2 on this under my user name and you may find some tips that will help you.
Cheers
Chris
You can get reproductions of these scoops from “The Parts Place”. I’ve run them for a few years on my ‘66 Starfire. I like them, but they don’t make any difference I can feel in the driver’s seat. Maybe mileage is up half an MPG. Maybe power is up a tick. I’ve never really A/B tested.
The reproduction scoops are accurate, but I found them a little long (fore-aft) for my ‘66 big car with oversize tires. Also you’ll have to make your own mounting brackets which is a slight pain.
Not too long ago I upgraded my tires & found that removing the frontmost 1.5” or so from the scoops eliminated the problem of oversize tire interference. Unless you go with NOS/OEM parts, consider doing this just so everything works right.
Have a look for posts in the last month or 2 on this under my user name and you may find some tips that will help you.
Cheers
Chris
I was at the Olds show in Dayton not long ago and noticed that of the OEM (original) scoops for sale, most had some tire damage from owners putting larger tires on which rubbed holes in the intake scoops. I guess the factory didn’t figure on owners putting bigger tires on as part of their scoop design specification..........
Last edited by allyolds68; Oct 16, 2023 at 04:52 AM.
Hopefully this helps you somewhat. I added the reproduction OAI system to my '69 442 several years ago. I can't say whether the '68 placement/attachment is the same as '69 but I suspect it's close. From my memory, the only modification I had to make to the car was to drill the large holes in the plastic inner fender wells. The '69 scoops have three bracket attachment points. Two 'long' legs near the inlet of the scoop and a small 'L' bracket on the circular neck. The long legs attached to existing points in the core support where the plastic inner fender wells attach. I believe the L bracket attached to the plastic well near the hole. The circular neck of the scoop goes through the hole, obviously. I found it interesting, at least on the '69, that the original plastic wells had small dimples formed into them in the location of the necessary holes. This was obviously done to aid the assembly guys in locating the features without the need for additional jigs. These may be on your '68 wells or they may be a hard lesson learned if the '68's didn't have them.
As mentioned, the assembly manual has the necessary details for the installation. You really need that to do it right - or at least to make it look original. With respect to tire rubbing, yes, there is a little. I'm running 245/60/15's on the front and there is a little rubbing at full lock but not bad. Definitely nowhere near as bad as described above. That may be a difference of the '68 to '69 scoop shape, placement of the scoops or both.
Also, don't expect any performance boost. This is underhood eye candy only. It does help the carb to draw in colder outside air and you should check your carb settings after install to make sure you don't go lean but it's more of a cool factor than anything. I guess to the average person I'm as bad as all the '70 owners who throw the fiberglass hood on their cars!
As mentioned, the assembly manual has the necessary details for the installation. You really need that to do it right - or at least to make it look original. With respect to tire rubbing, yes, there is a little. I'm running 245/60/15's on the front and there is a little rubbing at full lock but not bad. Definitely nowhere near as bad as described above. That may be a difference of the '68 to '69 scoop shape, placement of the scoops or both.
Also, don't expect any performance boost. This is underhood eye candy only. It does help the carb to draw in colder outside air and you should check your carb settings after install to make sure you don't go lean but it's more of a cool factor than anything. I guess to the average person I'm as bad as all the '70 owners who throw the fiberglass hood on their cars!
With respect to tire rubbing, yes, there is a little. I'm running 245/60/15's on the front and there is a little rubbing at full lock but not bad. Definitely nowhere near as bad as described above. That may be a difference of the '68 to '69 scoop shape, placement of the scoops or both.
Last edited by allyolds68; Oct 16, 2023 at 01:38 PM.
I put OAI on my 69 20 years ago, it’s always a conversation piece at car shows. People see the hoses coming off the air cleaner and follow them to the scoops, it definitely get attention.
I have no doubt they work. I have a Holley Sniper EFI, the IAT always reads about 7-10 degrees warmer than ambient temp. Disconnect the hoses, the IAT is a minimum of 30 degrees warmer.
Wheel offset is also a contributing factor on tire clearance. Years ago, I tried a set of crager 15x10 rear tires with 15x4 front runner tires. The diameter was almost identical to the regular front street tires, but the offset cause tire to contact the scoop. The tire will rub a hole almost immediately.
I have no doubt they work. I have a Holley Sniper EFI, the IAT always reads about 7-10 degrees warmer than ambient temp. Disconnect the hoses, the IAT is a minimum of 30 degrees warmer.
Wheel offset is also a contributing factor on tire clearance. Years ago, I tried a set of crager 15x10 rear tires with 15x4 front runner tires. The diameter was almost identical to the regular front street tires, but the offset cause tire to contact the scoop. The tire will rub a hole almost immediately.
a relevant question would be what’s the largest diameter tire you can run with OAI on a 68 442? (The only reason 14” or 15” matter is there is much greater selection of 15” tires available.) based on the replies above the answer would be about 26.6”. Width and backspace also comes into play because, in my experience, wider tires will rub the sway bar.
Last edited by allyolds68; Oct 18, 2023 at 06:03 PM.
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