Register now to get rid of these ads!

57 Chevy with factory two fours?

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by straykatkustoms, Nov 30, 2009.

  1. straykatkustoms
    Joined: Oct 30, 2001
    Posts: 24,680

    straykatkustoms
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Just looked at a project '57 Chevy hardtop with two fours. It has Corvette valve
    covers and it looks stock but I don't know if it was an after thought or did it come
    that way from the factory. The Chevy is all stock without any visual modifications,
    The owner has died so we can't ask any questions.

    I read that you could order one about any way you wanted back then so how can I
    tell if this is the way she rolled off of the line?

    Happy Trails,

    Mick
     
  2. teddyp
    Joined: May 28, 2006
    Posts: 3,197

    teddyp
    Member

    the 245 hp came with 2 wcfb,s 4 barrels and the 270 hp also came with them the valve cover,s ?
     
  3. Racewriter
    Joined: Nov 14, 2008
    Posts: 780

    Racewriter
    Member

    I've seen two dual-quad 270 horse 283 '57 Chevys that had the Vette valve covers with no other apparent modifications. Both, the owners discovered, had had warranty replacement engines, and apparently, the covers were on the warranty replacement engines. That said, it's not out of the realm of possibility that some engines intended for Vettes found their way into full size Chevys on the production line.
     
  4. ThePuck
    Joined: Apr 9, 2009
    Posts: 116

    ThePuck
    Member
    from Ottawa

    You would have to have the original bill of sale. Beyond that, making sure the carb numbers and date codes were reasonably correct, there is no way to tell.
     
  5. Join the Vintage Chevrolet Club of America, they have real good tech help. This board here is concerned less with authenticity.

    As far as I know there is no way to tell if your car was actually delivered with a dual quad motor. The firewall tag will just tell if it was a six or an eight. The block has casting #'s that may tell if it's a counterfeit, but if they used the correct block and head castings, then they could re-stamp the pad at the front of the right head with a code that could make the whole thing believable.
     
  6. straykatkustoms
    Joined: Oct 30, 2001
    Posts: 24,680

    straykatkustoms
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Thanks for the input guys.... He is thinking about replacing the engine with a small
    block and making it a driver. I told him it might be worth checking to see if it was
    a real McCoy, might make a difference in value. The other reason if he is looking to
    get rid of the motor It would sure look good in a future roadster project. Hhhmmmm!!
     
  7. squirrel
    Joined: Sep 23, 2004
    Posts: 57,862

    squirrel
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    should be a driver as it sits....
     
    Johnny Gee and olscrounger like this.
  8. 40StudeDude
    Joined: Sep 19, 2002
    Posts: 9,560

    40StudeDude
    Member

    WHAT'RE YOU doing looking at Chevys...??? :rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:

    R-
     
  9. Mike Morand
    Joined: Aug 1, 2009
    Posts: 20

    Mike Morand
    Member

    Before the wife came along I had a 57 with the 2 four, 270 horse engine. It was a single 4 barrel car to start with but when I did frame off restoration on it I changed it over to the 270 horse and no so called experts could tell. The VIN must start with a V otherwise its an original 6 cylinder. The 2nd letter will be C for a Belair,B for a 210 or an A for a 150. The cowl tag will show nothing as far as drivetrain. I did a whole lot of research before building my clone and there are a lot of little differences in a 2 four car like pulleys, generator, etc. I don't think any 2 four passenger engine would come with vette valve covers because they used the batwing aircleaner and the pots mounted to a small stand on each valve cover. Also all 2 four motors, the 245 and 270 versions used the 997 heads and they are very expensive so people usually use the more common 539 powerpack heads.
     
    olscrounger likes this.
  10. The Corvette valve covers are probably wrong. The big oil bath "Batwing" air cleaner on the pass cars used the stock valve covers as a support. The stamped steel valve covers had brackets welded to them for this purpose. (See pix below) The Corvettes used a totally different air cleaner; low, flat stamped aluminum with a horse-hair type element.

    And the replies above are correct; no way that I'm aware of to authenticate a factory dual quad car. The block casting numbers for a DQ car are the same as a Power-pack car.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    (Oops, simultaneous posting above. Sorry!)
     
    mgtstumpy and olscrounger like this.
  11. hemifarris
    Joined: Sep 30, 2005
    Posts: 2,321

    hemifarris
    Member

    Both 245 and 270 hp. come with regular,orange, valve covers and the "real batwing" air cleaner on passenger cars, (not the Oldsmobile/Cadillac 4 barrel air cleaner everyone calls the batwing).......
     
  12. MotorCityDeuce
    Joined: Apr 1, 2008
    Posts: 269

    MotorCityDeuce
    Member

    57's with dual four's from the factory had a "bat wing" style air cleaner, not individual air cleaners like the Corvette had. They came with steel painted "Chevrolet" valve covers and not the aluminum finned "Corvette" covers. There is no definitive way of determining if it came from the factory with dual quad's short of having the factory invoice. There should be a VIN tag applied with screws, not rivets to the driver's side door jam. By extrapolating info from you can determine approximate build date for the car. Then you can check the casting date on the motor to see if it jives with the assembly date of the car. On the front of the block is a stamped sequence of numbers/letters that indicate the build date of the motor and the type of horsepower-transmission configuration it is. It all are in agreement then maybe you have the original motor. Hope this helps!
     
  13. 37dodge
    Joined: Feb 22, 2006
    Posts: 202

    37dodge
    Member

    A dual quad car will also have a 3/8" fuel line out of the tank instead of the standard 5/16". I am sure all passenger 2x4 cars came with the script valve covers and not the corvette ones.
     
    olscrounger likes this.
  14. straykatkustoms
    Joined: Oct 30, 2001
    Posts: 24,680

    straykatkustoms
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    One of our clients bought it and since I'm tagged as a "car guy" he wanted me to check it
    out.

    That was the first thing I looked for was the bat wing'd air cleaner. I was snooping
    around and had to end up asking for it. He said that it came with individual air
    cleaners...... Might be wrong but still kool.

    Thanks guys for all of the help, I'll copy the post and forward it to him....

    Happy Trails,

    Mick
     
  15. stude_trucks
    Joined: Sep 13, 2007
    Posts: 4,754

    stude_trucks
    Member

    Yawn, now if it had a 'factory' hemi or blown Stude 289 in it, then that would be an exciting Chevy find. :D
     
  16. Big Block Bill
    Joined: May 14, 2009
    Posts: 300

    Big Block Bill
    Member

    _______________________________________________________________

    It is indeed possible. You could get the 2x4 set up with either hydraulic or solid cam. I think the solid version is 270HP, not sure of the hydraulic HP. The corvette covers, I'm not sure of, it could always been installed somewhere along the line. I don't think it would come on full sized car, but could be wrong.
     
  17. olscrounger
    Joined: Feb 23, 2008
    Posts: 4,803

    olscrounger
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    what they all said--3/8 fuel line and sender,997 heads,different pulleys,gen and fuel pump-tin covers with batwing-was common in early 60's to put on vette valve covers cause the tins ones leaked after a few valve adjustments (I did it too). There is a nice 57 around here with a later eng/trans but I happened to notice the lg gas line and correct frame clips on it-he thought it was a 270 HP car but has no way of knowing either-hope this helps
     
  18. owen thomas
    Joined: Jun 15, 2008
    Posts: 186

    owen thomas
    Member

    Two friends had 270 hp 1957 Chevys in ’57, and both had individual air cleaners and aluminum valve covers, and solid lifters. There was a two 4-barrel engine with hydraulic cam and less hp than the 270. I think that engine had the ‘bat wing’ as you call it. A friend of my dad had a fuel injected ’57 Vette with Powerglide and had a hydraulic cam and maybe 250 hp or something like that. Less that the famous 283 hp model. In spite of the Powerglide, it was still a pretty fast car. I used to get to drive it once in a while.
     
  19. 50Fraud
    Joined: May 6, 2001
    Posts: 10,099

    50Fraud
    Member Emeritus

    A 270 HP Chevy was a seriously fast car in its day. I would think the bragging rights would be considerably greater with the original engine than with a more modern SBC, especially if it has the correct Duntov cam with its great lopey idle.
     
  20. Single 4 bbl Power Pack - 220 HP
    Dual Quad Hydraulic cam - 245 HP
    Dual Quad Solid cam - 270 HP
    Fuel Injection Hydraulic cam - 250 HP
    Fuel Injection Solid cam - 283 HP
     
  21. 56Chevy4Dr
    Joined: Oct 25, 2009
    Posts: 34

    56Chevy4Dr
    Member
    from Texas

    -----------------------------------------------------------------------

    Man-O-Man, I agree with that. Even without Mr. Duntov, with an original "57" Block with rare staggered valve cover bolt heads would make a ride of envy. The two Four-Barrels with Corvette valve covers are just icing on the cake. Stay away from the modern sbc. You got a great nostalgia thing going and still be a great reliable driver!

    Not my car though but, I’m just say’n.

    Just my 2-cents & good luck,
     
    Last edited: Dec 2, 2009
  22. Finn Jensen
    Joined: Dec 20, 2008
    Posts: 676

    Finn Jensen
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Dead-on correct for 1957!
     
  23. I was around in '57 and two guys around my home town had 270 hp Bel Airs. One a 2 door hardtop and the other a post. Both of them had close ratio 3 speed transmissions and the gearing was really screwed up. They would go like 90 mph in low gear and almost as fast in 2nd as in 3d. A couple of other guys had 220 power packs with OD and 4:10 gears and they would smoke the 270's up to about 70 mph. A lot of street drags back then were 0 - 60 and those 220 overdrives would put it on the 270's every time.
     
    scruff likes this.
  24. Mike Morand
    Joined: Aug 1, 2009
    Posts: 20

    Mike Morand
    Member

    I don't know about 90 in low gear but my 57 270 had the close ratio 3 speed with a 3.55 rear but it would do an honest 60 in low gear, 100 in second and high gear would help slow it down. It was more motor than those optional 8.00x14 tires and drum brakes could handle but what a ride.
     
  25. oldbuzzard1
    Joined: Dec 2, 2013
    Posts: 7

    oldbuzzard1
    Member
    from Nevada

    I can verify that! Had a buddy back then with a 1958 Bel Air 2D hardtop, 283 three 2's, three on the tree. I was in the car when we did 90 in 1st gear, and it was still pulling when he backed off. Wicked.
     
  26. captainjunk#2
    Joined: Mar 13, 2008
    Posts: 4,420

    captainjunk#2
    Member

    so the thread is 7 years old now , wonder what happened to the car or the engine ????
     
  27. Gman0046
    Joined: Jul 24, 2005
    Posts: 6,256

    Gman0046
    Member

    I had a 58 Impala with a 348, three factory vacuum operated two barrels and a close ratio three on the tree. Not exactly remembering the first gear MPH but it was pretty high. Maybe in the 50-55 range. 90 MPH? I don't think so.

    Gary
     

Share This Page

Register now to get rid of these ads!

Archive

Copyright © 1995-2021 The Jalopy Journal: Steal our stuff, we'll kick your teeth in. Terms of Service. Privacy Policy.

Atomic Industry
Forum software by XenForo™ ©2010-2014 XenForo Ltd.