I have a stock '67 L-79, 327/350 hp motor. I talked to a previous owner who told me he had the entire engine rebuilt to stock specs while he was doing a cosmetic restoration...new pistons, cam, valves, everything.
The other day, I bought 5 gallons of CAM 2 110 octane leaded racing fuel for it, at $6 a gallon.
I mixed it with 5 gallons of 92 non leaded fuel with 10% ethanol added. The car runs better but I'm still evaluating that. I could hear the engine smiling as it slurped up that leaded gas though.
Anyway, I heard long ago that lead was good for these 40+ year old engines back in the day because the lead left a deposit on the exhaust valves and seats, thus protecting the valves and seats from the intense heat.
Yeah, this sounds crazy but I'm just curious... how long did it take the engine, running on leaded fuel, to leave a decent deposit of lead on the seats? A month, a year, a decade? As I stated above, all these engine internals only have a few thousand miles on them. Any guesses? Thanks, PT
The other day, I bought 5 gallons of CAM 2 110 octane leaded racing fuel for it, at $6 a gallon.

Anyway, I heard long ago that lead was good for these 40+ year old engines back in the day because the lead left a deposit on the exhaust valves and seats, thus protecting the valves and seats from the intense heat.
Yeah, this sounds crazy but I'm just curious... how long did it take the engine, running on leaded fuel, to leave a decent deposit of lead on the seats? A month, a year, a decade? As I stated above, all these engine internals only have a few thousand miles on them. Any guesses? Thanks, PT
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