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What year ranges, applications and types of carbs are you asking about?
The bottom line is there is nothing stamped into the carb to tie it directly to the car's vin.
In general, a service replacement will have a sticker or a tag indicating the rebuild service that did the work, not always.
Some rebuilders will stamp their own number on it. Some do nothing but rebuild it with what's in the carb stuff it into a box and call it good.
A generic rebuilt carb will fit many applications. A big house rebuilder can't possibly supply a carb for every specific application.
Thus any carb original or not needs to be tuned.
Always good to get a suspected original carb rebuilt by a custom shop that will, in writing, guarantee that's the same carb you sent in(always specify and get it in writing especially for the rarer carbs).
The fake forged restamps are getting pretty good today. Be aware and educated.
For a typical 7 series Quadrajet found on a 68-72 GM A body, the only way to tell if it's possibly the carb it came with is the date code on the throttle plate should fall within the accepted range of the car's build date.
It should have the right application number as well.
That throttle plate could have come from a different carb??
The 7 series number should match the engine & trans application...stick, auto, A/C etc...Same for the 170 series QJs. Again it could have come off any car that falls within that application definition.
Example: a 68 442 400 auto engine with AC should have a 7028251. If the date range is about a week to 4 weeks ahead of the cars build date that would be considered a good match. A 7028251 has many applications not just this car.
Replacement carbs can have all sorts of wrong numbers and mismatched parts(Horn Bowl Plate).
What year ranges, applications and types of carbs are you asking about?
The bottom line is there is nothing stamped into the carb to tie it directly to the car's vin.
In general, a service replacement will have a sticker or a tag indicating the rebuild service that did the work, not always.
Some rebuilders will stamp their own number on it. Some do nothing but rebuild it with what's in the carb stuff it into a box and call it good.
A generic rebuilt carb will fit many applications. A big house rebuilder can't possibly supply a carb for every specific application.
Thus any carb original or not needs to be tuned.
Always good to get a suspected original carb rebuilt by a custom shop that will, in writing, guarantee that's the same carb you sent in(always specify and get it in writing especially for the rarer carbs).
The fake forged restamps are getting pretty good today. Be aware and educated.
For a typical 7 series Quadrajet found on a 68-72 GM A body, the only way to tell if it's possibly the carb it came with is the date code on the throttle plate should fall within the accepted range of the car's build date.
It should have the right application number as well.
That throttle plate could have come from a different carb??
The 7 series number should match the engine & trans application...stick, auto, A/C etc...Same for the 170 series QJs. Again it could have come off any car that falls within that application definition.
Example: a 68 442 400 auto engine with AC should have a 7028251. If the date range is about a week to 4 weeks ahead of the cars build date that would be considered a good match. A 7028251 has many applications not just this car.
Replacement carbs can have all sorts of wrong numbers and mismatched parts(Horn Bowl Plate).
Are you confusing "remanufactured" carbs with "service replacement" carbs?
Pretty sure official "service replacement" carbs came straight from Rochester. Many of them have a distinct PN that's quite different than the OEM carb that came on the car.
From what I have seen with my '68 and '69, a service replacement carb will have the correct part number on it but the two-letter "broadcast code" will be missing and the production date code will be after the production year of the model year car involved.
Randy C.
'68 4-4-2 convertible
'69 4-4-2 convertible
Yes all true.
Rochester products dealer service replacements are identifiable sometimes times. Some got stamped some didn't. No hard rule. If it's not marked as such it's just as hard to verify.
I've seen remans in RP boxes that were pulled off a car and put into a box...in other words someone got a free carb.
Lets let the OP respond before going too far down the rabbit hole. He could be talking about a tea kettle or a VariJet for all we know.
In my experience, ACDelco service replacement carbs are Rochester-built carbs, which SHOULD be the same p/n in most cases on the side of your original carb. Not always, as sometimes, like alternators and such, they supersede part numbers as they go along. The key difference between most service replacements is the build dates are typically after the model year. Such as a 1972 service carb may have a 1974 date code stamp, for example. Same 1972 part number, though. Now, on the box, the parts catalog number may be way different. And that's the key to finding NOS carbs. You need to know the service replacement catalog part number to have much success finding one in the box.
One example that's odd is the 1984 Hurst/Olds carburetors. The service carb build dates on most of those were around June 6, 1984. The Hurst campaign ended in March 84. However, that was because somewhere along the line they decided while making those, they also made the factory-supplied 1985 442 carburetors. Most every 85 442 factory supplied carb came with the early June 5 or 6 ,1984 date as well. The 17084554 Hurst/Olds carb numbers magically got an overstamp on the year to make it 17085554 and also the internal plant code. The 84 H/O and 85 442 used the exact same carb. Interestingly, the service carbs for 85 442 did not get a restamp, they stamped them correctly from Rochester.
Here's a factory unit. Day 158 of 1984. June 6, 1984.
And another: June 5, 1984, day 157 of 84.
NOS 85 442 service carb with no overstamps (catalog part number 17111239): 0062, thus Jan 6, 1992? Doubt it's 2002.
Parts alone don't come with any stampings as the fact most fit more than one application.