These 1966 and 1967 427 PCV valve usage questions have come up now and then, with no clear evidence on what part was installed when.
Here's what I have been mulling over these last couple of months since the last time this came up:
Per the asy manuals we only have one part break point, 11-18-65, and that part continued for L36 and L72 in 67.
Why - for both years in the early service parts books, as well as those from the early 70's do we have:
66 - 67 (427) 1st design
66 - 68 (427 spc hi perf 2nd design) Sp HI perf = L72
??????????????????????????????????????????????????
The AIM does not break out L36 and L72 - and only has this one record of change, so why do all the parts books carry over this 1st design and 2nd design into 1967? Moreover why carry it into the subsequent years' editions as soecific line items?
This must mean that there WAS a difference in SOMETHING that caused for these separate line items. Was it functional design or a cost reduced design - maning maufacturing process of the valve changed?
***
Does this have anything to do with California emissions and A.I.R. cars?
Everything on the top of the motor dressings are different, air cleaner, all the brackets, hoses - pcv hose too - why would the PCV valve NOT be different?
***
Or since K19 shows as being used with L36, the L72 broke away from that base design?
***
On the L72 carb, is the vacuum port different such that it required - or they thought at the time it required non continuous valve function?
For example, does this valve close (non C function) when under hard race type acceleration?
***
1st design and 2nd design can mean two things from the parts we have seen:
1. Functionality - C=continuous or Non C= non continuous.
2. Mfg technology - initially fully machined - later parts hybrid - even later parts were a fully a stamped-tube type construction.
These are my thoughts:
Perhaps L36 and L72 BECAME different and this was just missed in the AIM.
66 up to the break point 691(solid steel)
66 after the break point AND 1967 - L36 - 691C (potentially later on part solid/ part stamped)
66 after the break point and 1967 - L72 - 736C (construction _?_) where by 1969 this valve was the thin metal stamped version, 1 5/8, and later in the 70's or 80's shortened to its current configuration.
Any 66 and 67 owners out there with very original cars care to comment, others with AC Spark Plug history ???
Here's what I have been mulling over these last couple of months since the last time this came up:
Per the asy manuals we only have one part break point, 11-18-65, and that part continued for L36 and L72 in 67.
Why - for both years in the early service parts books, as well as those from the early 70's do we have:
66 - 67 (427) 1st design
66 - 68 (427 spc hi perf 2nd design) Sp HI perf = L72
??????????????????????????????????????????????????
The AIM does not break out L36 and L72 - and only has this one record of change, so why do all the parts books carry over this 1st design and 2nd design into 1967? Moreover why carry it into the subsequent years' editions as soecific line items?
This must mean that there WAS a difference in SOMETHING that caused for these separate line items. Was it functional design or a cost reduced design - maning maufacturing process of the valve changed?
***
Does this have anything to do with California emissions and A.I.R. cars?
Everything on the top of the motor dressings are different, air cleaner, all the brackets, hoses - pcv hose too - why would the PCV valve NOT be different?
***
Or since K19 shows as being used with L36, the L72 broke away from that base design?
***
On the L72 carb, is the vacuum port different such that it required - or they thought at the time it required non continuous valve function?
For example, does this valve close (non C function) when under hard race type acceleration?
***
1st design and 2nd design can mean two things from the parts we have seen:
1. Functionality - C=continuous or Non C= non continuous.
2. Mfg technology - initially fully machined - later parts hybrid - even later parts were a fully a stamped-tube type construction.
These are my thoughts:
Perhaps L36 and L72 BECAME different and this was just missed in the AIM.
66 up to the break point 691(solid steel)
66 after the break point AND 1967 - L36 - 691C (potentially later on part solid/ part stamped)
66 after the break point and 1967 - L72 - 736C (construction _?_) where by 1969 this valve was the thin metal stamped version, 1 5/8, and later in the 70's or 80's shortened to its current configuration.
Any 66 and 67 owners out there with very original cars care to comment, others with AC Spark Plug history ???

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