Thank You! Mopars are fine and they are popular for all of the right reasons, but we Buick guys finally got some love, too!
@brianfloyd55103 жыл бұрын
hell yeah!
@Tj1983coggin3 жыл бұрын
Amen Brother!! 🥳
@DAUltimateSACRIFICE3 жыл бұрын
Damn straight!!
@moparproud39783 жыл бұрын
Buick’s aren’t much different than Mopars. For the longest time both were completely overlooked. Odd ducks that the mainstream never covered. It was all Chevy, Pontiac and Ford stuff. The only reason Mopars got popular is because of auctions, which is good and bad. Used to be you couldn’t buy anything for Mopars, now a LOT of stuff is reproduced and available. Buick never had the racing pedigree and Hemi to its advantage, the GSX is the big kahuna in the Buick world
@cdglasser3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for doing this video! As a guy with a 72 Buick Skylark powered by a Buick 470 (4.35" bore, 3.95" stroke), I always appreciate when someone else appreciates the big block Buick! The '70 block really is *not* the best one to get if you have options. '71 and later blocks are a better starting point, as they already have the larger oil passages built in (that's not to say that they can't benefit from oiling modifications - they certainly can - but they are a better starting point than a 70). My own block is a 75 - the 75 & 76 blocks are actually thought to be the best strength-wise. As for the heads, yes, if you're going to use the factory iron heads (many Buick guys go the TA Performance Stage 1/2 aluminum route), then the 67-70 heads are the best starting point from a compression and flow standpoint. The 67-69 heads seem to have more issues with cracking around the valve spring seat area. My engine was dyno'd at 605 HP at 6100 RPMs. No girdle, but definitely oiling mods (enlarged passages in the block; chamfered holes in the bearing saddles, front of the block, and crank; rear-grooved cam bearings). It has seen some dragstrip action and I typically shift at 6100. I have made probably around 20 passes at the strip since putting the engine in the car 5 years ago. So far so good. :-)
@trailerparkcryptoking5213 Жыл бұрын
ET’s?
@demogadget3 жыл бұрын
That's what I love about the muscle car erea...the Torque....I had a olds with a 455 in it. The low end power was amazing.
@jasonrackawack93693 жыл бұрын
A Pontiac 455 is a torque monster also.
@unclebob79373 жыл бұрын
3 455s all individual to the brand All great torque monsters.
@nastybastardatlive3 жыл бұрын
@Ryan Farnsworth who takes a big inch v8 past 3500? The whole idea is torque off idle.
@Whats-It-To-Ya3 жыл бұрын
5500 RPM was the limit for these motors before they throw rods and bearings. But like said earlier, there's really not much benefit to wind it out that high other than listening to the exhaust pipes scream.
@cutl00senc3 жыл бұрын
When you’ve got that much torque, you don’t need 6000 rpms to get down the highway
@lonewolf7443 жыл бұрын
I am not a mechanic and have never built or worked on any motor other than oil changes , brakes and plugs in my life. However I've watched every single video UTG has ever put out. Im hooked. It really makes me want to go buy and old junker and build it back to life. A Chevy of course. Lol. Dallas knows his stuff too. I can tell that.
@kurtisstutzman7056 Жыл бұрын
My parents marriage car was a green 69 Buick GS with a vinyl top... Mom couldn't drive a 4 speed, plus my sister was born in 71, so it was sold... Thanks, keep up your awesomeness and go enjoy some nature today...
@michaelbrinkley93233 жыл бұрын
As the caretaker of two Buick Riviera's a 63 and an 84 and having had three Regals I really appreciate this series. Thanks Tony
@ziptiejedi56583 жыл бұрын
My buddy's dad is a huge Buick guy. He has a Skylar that runs 10's but it looks stock. It's got a little bit of tire and 455 witg a Nitrous kit hiding under a "stock" looking carb/air cleaner. My buddy his son has Skylar that they put in a turbo 3.8/200r4 out of a 86 T type that will go deep into the 11's. Both cars are badass sleepers that don't look like much but they will give you a great view of their tail lights if you try them on the street!!
@colorwashcarsandguitars Жыл бұрын
I had a 71 Skylark in highschool with a 350. Not a big block but I loved that car. Buick's are some of my favorites.
@nolanbrown843 жыл бұрын
This is why I'm a Buick guy and why I've got a shed full of big block Buick parts. I just can't turn away from them. My 68 GS400 has a 430 from a 67 wildcat in it and while it's pretty tired it's still a ton of fun to rip around with that four speed. I can't wait for the rest of this series!
@LgSutterby3 жыл бұрын
I have a 430 out of a ‘67 Wildcat as well, got it for free, sitting in the corner of the garage waiting its turn. Think I want to build it and drop it in my grandma’s ‘79 four door Malibu lol
@0tt0mobile3 жыл бұрын
My 455 was the smoothest running engine I've ever owned. It idled so smooth I forgot it was running and put my 8hrs. in at work still running when I came back!😂
@bigneasy21063 жыл бұрын
😂😂
@jamesavery27343 жыл бұрын
@Lassi Kinnunen 81 Paycheck an hour 😂😂
@terrencehall72642 жыл бұрын
you are correct, I had a cammed 415ci Buick, it idled like a V6 until you stomped the gas pedal, then all hell broke loose, it'll break any tire loose you can put on the car. I had a V6 Oldsmobile omega and I put the 455 in there,locked up the rearend and it will shredd the tires until I got off the gas.
@dyer2cycle Жыл бұрын
Ha!...and it hadn't run out of gas in 8 hours?...
@kevin2960 Жыл бұрын
I've been building these things since I was 16 and I'm 42. I would say 71 are the best heads. Still have the round coolant holes, only a few cc bigger than 70 and are way less likely to crack. And i have had better luck porting them without going through anywhere. 68-69 big ports flow the best, with stage 1 valves installed they even out flow stock stage 1 heads from 70. But they crack like crazy. Im currently running Edelbrock heads and i lost power switching to them. Im going to port them this winter.
@johnwjr29053 жыл бұрын
Mike & TA built me a 455 with their Stage 2 street heads. Put in an ‘80 Regal. Motor was an animal.
@danareynolds17863 жыл бұрын
If you want to build a B455 without concern of pedigree, start with a 1976 block. All pre-72 blocks suffered from core shift. Some of the core shift issues can be solved with proper - and expensive - machine work, but many had literally twisted lifter valleys; you can look down the lifter bores- front to back - and they don't make a straight line. By late 1975, Buick had solved their core shift issues. They also had enlarged and cleaned up the oil gallies by then, too. The huge main bearings on the short stroke crank (3.9" - compare that to the other big displacement competitors) actually helped keep bottom end strength in the lightweight thin-wall blocks.
@Tumbleweed_Tx3 жыл бұрын
in the 70's, my mom bought her sister's '70 Buick Estate Wagon with a 455 HO... She took us for a ride around the neighborhood the day we got it... My mom was a bit of a hooligan when she was younger, so imagine the fun we had! It became my older brother's first car, some kid smashed into it in the late 70's. I miss that car sometimes.
@DarkSim773 жыл бұрын
No such thing as a HO 455 Buick..
@fnafplayer64477 ай бұрын
That kid better have payed
@davidbaldwin15913 жыл бұрын
Fill up the Deuce, hook up the Airstream and cruise the interstate running 70. Those were the days I was too young to remember, & I'm over 50.
@christiantomlin40403 жыл бұрын
I put a Buick 455 in a 73 Chevy C20 about 20 years ago. It was a relatively easy swap. I used 72 Electra mounts, top for sure we're Buick and the lowers, I cannot recall for certain but I thing they were the Chevy frame mounts. Used a transdapt adapter plate. Had to put a small notch in the front frame rail for the oil filter. (Could have used a relocation kit but I was too cheap). Truck was a torque beast after that swap. Smooth as glass too!
@johnnymartines21183 жыл бұрын
In the 80's we street raced in Philly with a gutted out 69 Electra with a worked 430ci. Ended up snapping the frame over the rear which creased the quarters it was launching so hard! Total respect for Buick!
@gt-37guy63 жыл бұрын
Johnny, Early 90s I had a 69 Electra Convertible...430 had slight build - Stage I heads and Cam, Shift kit - I did the same thing - I ripped the rear trailing arm out of the frame! Had it welded and sold it - scared me a bit after that. Ran Nitrous on it for a while - shocked the hell out of a buddy with a 911 Porsche when I pulled next to him at 45 MPH floored it and hit the nitrous and lit up for 100 ft or so. He was chasing me and was complaining how slow his car was running that day...When I saw how the manifolds and heads would glow red hot using the bottle so hard, I pulled it off before I fried the engine! Fun for about 2 weeks!
@theboz192 жыл бұрын
Nice!!!
@gt-37guy62 жыл бұрын
Johnny...that is crazy cool! I remember reading an article in Hot Rod magazine back in the 80s about Buicks being the hottest sleepers in the NYC and Jersey street racing scene...."Fast Bottle Fed Buicks" I recall reading....very captivating. A few years later I had a 69 Electra 430 convertible with Stage I heads and cam, wasn't so much a quarter miler but very strong big car, and I played with Nitrous on it for a while...yanked my rear control arm out of the frame while my soon to be wife was in the car with my ....yup those were the days! Earlier that year I snapped a u-joint in two hitting 2nd gear rubber -it hit so hard...damn.
@mikebrown44293 жыл бұрын
i rebuilt a 350 buick , ported the heads and did the port match . just an rv cam and put it a 68 jeep wagoneer . that was i GOOD running motor
@brucejones23543 жыл бұрын
Just a short story. In 1985 I was looking for a cheap car for my wife. One of the guys at work had a '72 Wildcat that he sold me for $100. It needed a new ring gear for the starter. One day I had my then 8 year old son with me and he asked " can this car do a burn-out? I just smiled and said yeah. ½ mile later we hit the freeway, not much traffic so I came almost to a stop then floored it. When we hit the top of the ramp we were doing somewhat over 90 mph, and the tires were still smoking! He still remembers this! What a lot of fun you can have with that much torque ! ! !
@matthewmiller226810 ай бұрын
Imagine your son was grinning from ear to ear.... I know I would be 😊
@kevinmcguire37153 жыл бұрын
I used to tuneup an old man in the neighborhood's 68 Riviera 430 back in the early 70's. I was amazed at the power this heavy vehicle had . A real nice cruiser.
@crazycoffee3 жыл бұрын
I love the 455 Oldsmobile in my Toronado. A cam, intake, carb, ignition and rockers. Lots of power and very fun. Ive learned a lot and applied it to my car from you Uncle Tony.
@peadarmacewen47103 жыл бұрын
Dallas and Tony - both great communicators - not that common among mechanics, (not a slight, I was in the motor trade for 30 years) a real joy to listen to guys that really know what they are talking about.
@2009mechanic3 жыл бұрын
My first car was a 1968 Buick Wildcat 430 CID 4BBL TH400 #5000 car. After I figured out the oil system issue by installing the TRW extra capacity oil pump kit , it was all good after that. I even ran it at the drag strip against an early 1970's Cadillac Coupe Deville with the 500 CID engine. We called it "the battle of the Barges ". I won. Not really quick but loved running high speeds. Mine had the 4 wheel drum brakes. Front drums were aluminum with a steel liner cast into them for wear surface. Very different I thought. I drove it a long time. Had lots of miles on it before it locked up. Then bought a 1973 Chevy Impala with the 454. Both were real torque monsters.
@rollin193 жыл бұрын
My father grew up in the 60's and people think I don't know about these old cars for my age but I learned from him. He tought me everything I know about old cars. Back in the early 70's my father bought a 1969 chevelle ss with a 4 speed and he would pull up in the HS parking lot and smoke the tires off it.Guys would pull up next to him and tell him they all all this engine work done and it was blanced and blue printed,he just had a stock 396 and he would blow their doors off and after they would ask what you got under the hood? He just made sure his engine was tuned! My grandfather was car guy he was a lead man and did body work for years,they used to get dealers cars and my father drove all of them. Back in the sixties it was the golden era of muscle cars his buddies had the plymouth dusters,he saw the shelby mustangs,the hemi cars his buddies had them all,bought them brand new and he rode in them as a teenager. My uncle served during Vietnam and bought a brand new Impala ss 409 and later sold it because it was too fast. I got stories for days but what a time to live!
@lindanelson84003 жыл бұрын
This video reminded me of the day in 1975 when dad drove in the driveway with our brand new Buick Electra 225 Park Avenue. Talk about an ocean liner with tons of Chrome. Absolutely beautiful, but the problem was it was to long for the garage. Dad had to knock out the back of the garage, and pour concrete, extending the rear wall a couple feet so he could park it in the garage and close the garage door.
@dougaustin1328 Жыл бұрын
Of garage,it was all good,we Boyz cruzed in that Buick!!!
@timrayburn24613 жыл бұрын
One thing you failed to mention is that the 430's oiled the rocker arms thru oil passages in the block and heads ; when Buick tooled up for the 455 they designed it to oil thru the push rods like a Chevy.Which means you can run a 430 head on a 455.but you can not run a 455 head on a 430.
@bcbloc023 жыл бұрын
Excellent video! Buicks and Pontiacs are under loved.
@jasonrackawack93693 жыл бұрын
Any good late 60s to mid 70s Buick, Olds, Pontiac 455 will make tons of torque.
@Bill_N_ATX3 жыл бұрын
I had an olds 455 that was a monster. Made great power and parts were cheap. Not a huge amount of aftermarket support but I really didn’t need it. Made more than enough for my cutlass.
@mikemcdaniel25703 жыл бұрын
Not as much as the Buick 455 day
@crazycoffee3 жыл бұрын
@@Bill_N_ATX I love my 455 In my Toronado. Cam intake carb lifters and ignition. Lots of torque and accelerates pretty good.
@mikemcdaniel25703 жыл бұрын
I own the 1970 Buick GSX in the late seventies early eighties stage one it was a torque monster
@DavidValdezBigWaveDave3 жыл бұрын
There’s a hierarchy: Buick 455 > Pontiac 455 > Olds 455. The Olds and Poncho generate massive torque because their under square design, the Buick will make torque too, but it revs and makes more power through the rpm. I’m a Buick fanboy, so I’m not hating on the others because they’re all pretty damn cool bits of American history
@LgSutterby3 жыл бұрын
Richard Holdener would like to have a word with you about the 472 and 500 inch Cadillac... lol They’re not heavy. I have a photo on my phone of a 500 with an aluminum intake, alternator, and manifolds mounted to it on a scale displaying 580 lbs, that’s 5 lbs more than a small block Chevy, with twice the torque. They were cast with a high nickel content, making them durable and lighter. Factory crank is forged. The main Achilles heel of the 472/500 was the stock rocker setup, it was a dinky T-pedestal and spring clip setup, and if you up spring pressure at all the rocker pedestals shear off. There are shaft rocker systems available, and there’s big inch Cadillacs that turn 7K and up
@edwardpate61283 жыл бұрын
Pontiacs in the 60's also had a high nickel content in the blocks. I've seen a bare unpainted 428 short block sit in a Michigan garage with no heat for several years and it had zero surface rust.
@steveelenbaas59993 жыл бұрын
Had a ‘71 GS 455 4spd really a nice driving hi perf luxury car lots of torque close ratio heavy gearbox 2:20 first gear had to change clutches about every 2 years, loved that car.
@erniemanco3 жыл бұрын
Awesome Tony, theres a shortage of Buick videos. My personal favorite Brand X! They don't call the 455 the Hemi Killer for nothing. : )
@ericbrandt8293 жыл бұрын
My buddies brother swapped in a 445 Buick into a Chevy 1Ton truck many years ago....We took the "well broken in" 350 4bbl motor...put it into my other buddies 65 ChevyII that was 283 2bbl.....Both parties were pretty happy with their trades...The "Deuce" went deep into the 14's with a teenaged cobbled exhaust system😁
@xmo5523 жыл бұрын
Nice to see UTG step up from a Hemi into a BBB. Buick has been stomping on Hemis since new.
@robt33053 жыл бұрын
One of the first engines i worked on, what i actually learned about engines on, was a Buick Nailhead 445. Kept it out of a car a family member was scrapping justvto tinker with.ocked up from sitting for seven years, took weeks to get it apart. My dad was mad at me for taking ip garage space with junk. Never bought a single part, but after a month plus of cleaning parts, my dad was amazed when i fired it up sitting on garage floor.
@AudioOrchardMusic3 жыл бұрын
I have a bunch of these engines, I use one in my truck every day and tow large loads with it on a regular basis. I really love these things!
@AudioOrchardMusic3 жыл бұрын
@@vrm86gt That would be a cool swap for sure! The torque curve is so broad on these that they just pull and pull. Not real screamers unless you do some fairly major mods on the bottom end and oiling system (as indicated in the video), but even a mild one with a few speed parts pulls pretty hard. They get good mileage in my experience as well, though many don't seem to believe that, it is a big part of the reason I use them in trucks.
@dennisgauck75263 жыл бұрын
L
@badas95Z3 жыл бұрын
@@AudioOrchardMusic I have a 79 Chevy c30 and have a Electra 225 that I want to pull the engine from and put in there for an occasional tow truck and daily work truck. Do you have any advice as far as the installation? I’m going to take the engine to the machine shop and have it gone through first though. Thanks in advance for any help
@AudioOrchardMusic3 жыл бұрын
@@badas95Z Honestly it's not too hard. I pulled the clip off the truck and made a marker that pointed to the center of the crank pulley on the BBC that came out. I did this because I wanted to make sure that I retained the drive-line geometry. I intended to fabricate mounts that would line the Buick up exactly where the Chevy had been. I bolted the car-side mounts to the mounts on the engine and dropped it down onto the truck frame pads just to see where I was starting. To my amazement, it was dead nuts on the money. So it seems that the BBC and the BBB have the same crank center line to mount geometry. All I had to do was center the engine, tack weld the mounts to the pads, remove the engine and drill the holes to mount the car mounts to the truck pads. After that it was just a matter of having the driveshaft altered (I used the BOP TH400 and it was longer). Everything else was standard engine swap stuff!
@coywhiteheadjr3 жыл бұрын
Hey, let's not forget the Cadillac 501, in 1970, that thing was a stump puller, when put into a smaller, light weight body. Same with the 472, in a Cheverly, camaro, or nova, they would melt the tires right off the rim!
@mrpenland3 жыл бұрын
back in the 1980's i had the fastest streetcar in my area it was a 1968 skylark had a 12 bolt 400 turbo from kenne bell and a 455 built from poston enterprise parts
@saldada69283 жыл бұрын
rip Poston Enterprises!!
@gt-37guy62 жыл бұрын
Sweet..great memories! I have a 74 Century GS 455, it had been built with Poston 10:1 Pistons, cam with .490 lift, and headers, all done by the seller before I purchased 5 years ago. Strangely he put in new Auburn rear gears and stuck with factory 3.08 highway gear! Not great off the line but a terror from 60 to 125 mph. I thought he said he rebuilt the trans but I soon found that weak link banging 2nd gear rubber too many times. The Trans shop said I broke the drum in the T400, they had never seen that before....hehehe. I sure remember a horrific "not so good" noise and barley got home.
@gregorytimmons47773 жыл бұрын
I had a 425 Nailhead with dual quads and 4 speed in a '62 Studebaker Lark Daytona convertible. One of the most fun cars i ever owned and i have had a '67 427 Vette, a '53 Olds with built 394 / hydro and a few sports cars of British and Italian manufacture plus a'67 Malibu SS 396 that i built. That Buick was a torque monster and made for a great street freak.
@LunarOutlawsGarage3 жыл бұрын
This was a fantastic video Tony you know how much I Love Buick and their 455!!! Ty for bringing light to one of the greatest Engines ever built fantastic.
@marcusmaddenov24513 жыл бұрын
So Tony now you have to build something with a 455 Buick in it.
@OllamhDrab3 жыл бұрын
I had a big wagon with the 455 Pontiac for a little while, I didn't like hammer on it though cause my friend loaned it to me. :)
@deniseb38973 жыл бұрын
Go with a '67 to 76' Dart. Talk about "Dare To Be Different"! I was kinda kidding when I started to write this, but damn, 500 plus foot pounds in something weighing 3200 lbs. Probably a lot less knowing how Uncle Tony likes to take out weight. Also that short wheelbase with no more weight up front than a 340 with a.c. Better use mini tubs!
@dcrog693 жыл бұрын
Miata
@chaddavis72283 жыл бұрын
Miata 2
@Tj1983coggin3 жыл бұрын
Or the 430. It has the right heads, exhaust and much more structural strength. Needs oiling mods, so more work and give up 25 ci but less money
@kennethcohagen3539 Жыл бұрын
There was an article years ago in Hot Rod I believe, where they took every big block available and built them with the same cam profile and everything that was a close as possible to the other engines. They tested an Olds455, along with Pontiac and Buicks 455’s, a 454 Chevy, 460 ford and Mopar 440. All of the engines used Edelbrock’s Heads except for the Buick. It got TA Performance’s heads that were as equal as possible to the rest of the engines. TA has heads ranging from near stock to a version of the Stage III heads with huge ports that would be used for racing only. At the end of the tasting the Buick 455 took top honors, followed by the Mopar 440. The Chevy 454 with Edelbrock’s oval port type heads came in third and the worst of the bunch was the Olds. When you took the hp for each of these heads and figured the Hp per cubic inch the Buick and 440 were very close. Now in a follow up to this test the builder took the. I’m Block Chevy and added bigger heads, different manifold and cam and it made more Horsepower than the others. I think the Chevy guys had a fit over not winning the competition, or Chevy themselves funded the improved version of the 454. I have no doubts that if the other engine were given the same treatment they would have done as well as the 454.
@bravoA-su8xm3 жыл бұрын
we need to find tony a AMC guy
@dcrog693 жыл бұрын
Love AMC
@richarda9963 жыл бұрын
Sold mine in ‘84, I still miss it. 1977 AMC Hornet station wagon 304. 280 hp at rear wheels.😂😂😂
@codyramos32003 жыл бұрын
The javelins that raced in the trans-am series from 68-71 was not glorious with more down than ups... but damn the amount of parts developed in that time span to race was incredible! Could have built a mean street car with factory parts from dealer the adjustable coil overs , springs , track bars, brakes etc.. not to mention the cross ram intake manifold with two 4 barrel dominator carbs .. I never really thought much of AMC till I see the trans-am racing efforts and what was accomplished in such short time.
@zelenskysboot3613 жыл бұрын
AMX
@Shutchohole3 жыл бұрын
I grew up in a Matador, 2 Gremlins, and a Concord.
@rodneybyrd95163 жыл бұрын
I'm a MoPar guy who also loves Buicks, and this is the reason why! Learned to drive in a '72 Electra 455, my first car (at 16, bought myself) was a '72 LeSabre Custom 455, took my date to the prom (1985) in a mint '76 Electra Limited 455. Built a mild, cast pistoned 455+.040" (464") with iron Stage1-spec heads, a hydraulic .520" lift cam, 850DP, weedburner headers and a Mallory Double Life distributor and ran high 8s at 160mph on pump 93 in a rail dragster with a Fiat fiberglass Topolino body.
@patriley53333 жыл бұрын
Glad to see you know the importance of deburring block edges to stop heat spikes...and so you can lift them without gloves!
@craigbenz48353 жыл бұрын
I had a '73 Buick with a 455 and loved that motor.
@steveesman94693 жыл бұрын
The nailheads he kept talking about started as a 264 cubic incher, then it grew to 322,364 then the 401 and the 425,the top power maker was the 425 dual quad super wildcat,360 Hp. And 465 ft.lbs.,they were done making power by 6,000 rpm. And peak torque came at 2,800 rpm.,with the right car and gearing they make a decent streetcar motor,as far as reliability I had a 425 with 257k on it when I got it,sold the car years later but knew who had it and how it was being driven,it had to have over 500k on it when it was finally rebuilt in 08 or 09,and probably half of that was beating the snot out of it!!!
@jasonrackawack93693 жыл бұрын
B.O.P. each did the best with what they had to work with. One of the advantages Chevy had with their big block 396 to 454 was that besides higher sales volume they also had a truck division which made it way more economical to develope and share heavy duty parts like forged cranks and rods. I know from studying pontiac history the division wanted to use forged parts in the bottom end of all the performance engines but due to cost concerns they were limited to only the special engines ment for racing like the ram air 4 and super duty. For the regular gtos and firebirds with a more common 400 or standard 455 they had to worry about availability and cost of the forged parts. The fact the 73 to 74 super duty 455 even made it into a street car in the early 70s was a miracle.
@THRASHMETALFUNRIFFS3 жыл бұрын
Nice one Dallas, all new info to me I never seen one out of the car. My old manager lady at McD's years ago had a giant Buick Wildcat 455... she was a Wildcat
@michaelcuff57803 жыл бұрын
The 430 I had in my 68 Electra 225 was a torque monster!
@SpecialAgentJamesAki3 жыл бұрын
The Buick 455 is definitely on my wish list. External dimensions on the olds is super small too. I’ve got an olds 455 on a stand next to a Chevy 327 and they are very close in size. The olds is definitely heavier tho. The cylinder heads, intake, and stock manifolds are ridiculously heavy on the olds.
@MrJohnnyDistortion3 жыл бұрын
An old friend of mine had a '73 Pontiac Ventura Sprint, 4 SP stick with the factory functional shaker, correct hood and ralley gauges (which I scored accidentally in the salvage yard on his birthday) and he transplanted a 375 HP 525 ft/lbs torque 455 from a '70 Boneville and factory 3:55 gears. Total cost under $2K. Nothing could touch it. Idled smooth. The factory curb weight with a factory 350 was 3,240 lbs and HP was around 170.
@ClassicRideSociety3 жыл бұрын
I scored a 455 in the junkyard for $350 last yr. Was in a 70 Electra 225
@DougsterWolverineGarage3 жыл бұрын
The "Deuce and a Quarter!" That's what they all called a 225 electra when I was a kid
@elinino52753 жыл бұрын
Great score!
@hailtothe_rooster15723 жыл бұрын
@@DougsterWolverineGarage I’ve got a 75… that’s all I’ll call it
@DougsterWolverineGarage3 жыл бұрын
@@hailtothe_rooster1572 what color is it? Triple white was common (white car white top white interior) or triple black
@mudduck7543 жыл бұрын
A '70 stage one 455 was an fucking animal. My brother played with Buick's, back in the day,and had a '70 GSX that used to walk away from my '70 340 Dart Swinger like I was in reverse. Put an old 401 in a '49 Studebaker truck, and had to pour an inch of concrete in the bed,just to get it to hook up on dry payment.
@THRASHMETALFUNRIFFS3 жыл бұрын
I went bracket racing once in 1996 and got up through a few stages till I got paired with a Buick GSX... by then a couple plugs were starting to foul and it hiccupped off the line just enough that he got me. His car was pristine and mine was a beater sleeper though! You can see it in my 96 Racing VHS dude!
@stephenkeebler7323 жыл бұрын
My friend in Trade School had a 455 in his Vega Station Wagon: had to put a layer of bricks across the back with a sheet of plywood over them and J-bolted to the floor, just to get traction...
@fjb35443 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this. So many shows today have perfect a world scenario garage working on engines that were never produced as such from the manufacturer and cost a mint to build. Love these old motors
@danaglass53943 жыл бұрын
Stage 1 in '69 was a higher lift cam, curved distributor, larger carb, 2200 stall converter (automatic of coarse). Larger intake valve didn't make a difference on the 400, but breathed great with the 455.
@joshsamuelson17933 жыл бұрын
I would love a Riviera with a 455. My parents had a 87 t type that was awesome to drive.
@jbrennan1233 жыл бұрын
Those Buick big blocks really remind me of a slimmed down FE. They even have the same style oiling issues. Detailing the block to account for oiling restrictions are definitely a must on both engines.
@musclecarcampy99223 жыл бұрын
I can't believe how much great information is in this video.
@zelenskysboot3613 жыл бұрын
I remember Buick V6 running for pole, and they'd swap the motor race day. Much respect for Buick. Although they couldn't run 500 miles
@henrys.68643 жыл бұрын
The cam bearing oil holes on the TA grooved cam bearings are also clocked differently from stock to help in cam journal load bearing.
@IronWoode3 жыл бұрын
the 425 Super Wildcat (465) was rated at 360 HP with 2 carter carbs. It looked wild. You rarely see that at car shows.
@francfurian82153 жыл бұрын
This an interesting series, I really like it & learn a lot from it. Keep up the excellent work guys. Cheers & stay safe😊
@easygoing24793 жыл бұрын
I love these engine architecture videos by the Man from Uncle. If you relax and maybe have a few drinks just before you watch this, you'd swear he knows what he's talking about!
@mikeraftis63323 жыл бұрын
I still have my poston headers on my 455 in my g body. My block is stock standard 1970 455. You guys are awesome. You two sound like me and my buddy who builds Buicks 40 years ago.
@JimmyLoose3 жыл бұрын
I fell out of my chair when I opened this video and there was no Miata in it.
@benjaminbellamy72073 жыл бұрын
Hmm, 455 Miata or Slant Six Buick Skyhawk...
@conrailfan62773 жыл бұрын
Yes the 455 Buick is a torque monster!!! I put mine in a 79 Regal along with a Turbo 400 and destroyed the pinion and ring gear in the rear end!!! Eventually I pulled the engine and Trans out of the Regal and dropped it in a 80 Chevy Truck where it still resides!!!!
@AtZero1383 жыл бұрын
Nice to see Dallas on here Boss and Boss lady .. sharing info and history 👍😉
@josephklimchock54123 жыл бұрын
Love listening to this stuff, I worked on all this back in the 70's in our family gas station repair shop..........love all the BB back then.........yeah, had and loved Chrysler BB like the 440.......best water pump design ever, so so easy to replace, 4 bolts on the fan and 4 bolts on the pump and done!!!!! no accessories to remove or coolant hoses.......still to this day the best design for this IMO.........BTW....I have done hundreds of water pumps in my day........Never had a BB Buick though, maybe it is time to find a project???
@gt-37guy62 жыл бұрын
Buicks are great motors, but if water pumps are your thing, may be one of the worst pumps in the GM fleet. Replaced 3 in my 69 Electra but that was in the 90s, can't imagine the parts are any better now. Buick must use 10 or 12 goddamn bolts for the pump - of differing sizes and lengths if I recall correctly....and a nicely convoluted base housing for extra fun gasket scraping!
@u1219213 жыл бұрын
I recall the Buick specific Q jet was supposed flowing 25 CFM than rest . I used to love standing on it because the induction Honk was louder and sweeter than the rest . Last LeSabre i had started knocking so we started standing on it to see what would let loose . Couple W O T runs we got a bang and it stalled but restarted and the knock was gone . O P light was on so i tried to make it back to the garage when it all let loose with a bigger bang like a bulldozer blade dropping . The 3rd crank arm journal broke free and went up thru the cam while the 2 rod big ends had gone out thru opposite sides of the block . I thought i had a spare engine but since the rope oil seal was really leaking and it ran hot in the donor car i went thru it and found the 1 crack common to late 70s Buicks . They crack where the cylinder meets the bottom of the deck . Usually stays sealed until you torque the head after a new gasket .
@westernblood37323 жыл бұрын
Dig the Buick love you are offering up Uncle Tony. I agree with you on the Nailhead, hard to beat a full dressed Nailhead for looks. TV Tom Ivo set a number of records with his before moving on to Hemi's. The famous Grabowksi Cadillac powered T v. Tommy's Nailhead T showed what Buick Torquey mills could do in lightweight Rods.
@biscuitboy36173 жыл бұрын
Just my opinion of course, but a far as a brand X engine being the king, I would have to appoint that to the 429/460 Ford engines. The biggest bore size of all, no metal removed from critical areas (so yes, it's much heavier than a SBC!), generous bore spacing, large diameter fasteners (head bolt, main bolt sizes), big enough crankcase area to build way over 500 cubes without needing an aftermarket block, decent flowing canted valve cylinder heads, and a much bigger aftermarket support than a Buick. But I do love big torque no matter what form its in!
@T0tenkampf3 жыл бұрын
Ford wouldnt be the brand X as they are a main company but yeah my Ranchero came with a 460 in it and its hood cheap power
@codyburkhart58193 жыл бұрын
More Buick tech I love these episodes!. I have a 68 wildcat w/430-4
@bbb462cid3 жыл бұрын
Dallas here knows WTF he's talking about. Thank you Buick Engineer Dennis Manner and thank you Mike Tomaszewski at TA Performance. For people wanting a Buick 455, my advice is seriously consider a '74 and up block for the larger oil passages. Having an SS code 455 block (1970 code) is great, but oil pressure, oil pressure, oil pressure. Also get the TA Performance timing cover. It houses the oil pump, and the TA unit has a steel thrust plate, longer impellers, and an adjustable valve. Oil pressure was quite healthy during 25+ years ofspring to fall daily use, even hard use, in my 455-bored-to-462. I love TA's aluminum Stage 1 heads and their big tube headers were designed by using a 1970 GS455 Stage 1 as the template. Those tubes just fit right, and they have a thick flange. Installation can be a trick, but I found that on the driver side you can put the engine mount on the frame pad with the bolt in it, and still reach in to bolt the engine mount to the block, with the weight of the engine still on the hoist. Trying it with the driver's side mount bolted on the block is an exercise in madness! I was still able to use a 3" collector too, but insulate your floors! They have a nice selection of cams at TA too. I can't say enough good things about TA Performance. You can also get D-port Stage 2 heads but you need to o-ring it, and add additional head studs by drilling your block and...my world's the street so I never bothered.
@ole-mariusbergesen78183 жыл бұрын
I love the videos tony do with this guy.
@bigbear55103 жыл бұрын
ROLL UP YOUR CIGARETTE!!! LOL GREAT VIDEO UTG!!!👍 HELLO ULTRA KATHY!!! Great Big Block Buick Engine information Dallas!👍 I look forward to hearing more about them!
@thomasbrown77283 жыл бұрын
Great video! I never knew Buick was so different.
@raphialhebert3 жыл бұрын
Great explanation guys. When I started into classic cars, I really got heavy into Buicks, especially the BBB. Nailheads are super cool and super fun, but you're right. They don't have a very good valve train design for reliable high horsepower. 400-455s on the other hand were much better and much more reliable. I've owned many, many cars and interesting V8s from DeSoto hemis, MEL big blocks, to Caddy big blocks, Big block Dodges and Fords, and Ford FE motors, Pontiac small and big blocks, Olds small and big blocks... to everything Chevy. By far, the Buick 455 was the most convincing for me, and I've owned many Buicks (I have a 1970 455 Buick Electra 225 Limited right now in great shape). I will always be convinced that the BBB was one of GM's best engines at the time.
@anthonypritchard77103 жыл бұрын
Loving the Buick stuff!!!
@samrotheray580510 ай бұрын
Thanks for doing this. I have a few 455. And a 69 gs 400 engine. I'm actually just getting ready to start working on one. Good tips. Thank you.
@brocluno013 жыл бұрын
Good show. Yes Buicks are torque monsters. Back in the day, they were the cheapest way to power pulled from a wrecking yard. I dunno how many big nail heads we stuck in pick-ups. Short bed 59 Ford with a 401 was not something you'd choose on the street. We're talking 1970's, so no real street outlaws, no E-85, just Chevron Supreme and Atlas Plycron tires ... But any Buick Big Block could be made to scare folks on the street. And OBTW, Nail Heads fit in narrow spaces like 54 Chevy engine bays. All that TQ will make you a hero on the street :-)
@edwardpate61283 жыл бұрын
Many Nailheads were used in early hot rods due to the compact size especially width. The only issue with them sometimes was the starter being on the drivers side of the car could make clearing the steering an issue.
@regal7point5943 жыл бұрын
My family and several friends have run Buick 455's in street and strip cars for as long as I can remember. Several builds running 11's through cast iron manifolds in full weight street cars with power steering...doesn't take much to get them right. Running 10's is certainly more expensive, but honestly not necessarily more than a BBC for instance. Good machine work and basic oiling mods and we have a full weight GS running mid 10's with factory ported heads and stock crank, stock rods. No girdle and turning 6500rpm + at times.
@woodgrain183 жыл бұрын
I have a 76 delta 88 I bought from the original owner in December 2019 with 63,000 miles super super nice car it's like getting in a time machine and perfect paint and chrome, I bought it to run big wheel stuff it's on 26's but I got a set of skinny's and 28x10.5w's to. Me and my pawpaw fooled around with the 455 he likes old buicks it ended up getting a cam, he rebuilt and touched up the heads a single plain intake, Holley 850 double pumper and a zex perimeter plate jetted for a 100 shot a nice distributor and summit ignition box and he found some old headers that we massaged to fit it also got converter and a manual valve body we welded the rear end up and it ended up running 7.80's in the 1/8 full weight on non e pump 93 with VP octane booster. It's got a rod and piston ls2 with a Borg s480 a th400 and mini tubed a 9 ford its about finished just needs the interior and small things put back together and the Holley efi wired up and the co2 stuff for the boost controller. Its gonna go 6.80-90's on 26's is the goal I know it will do it
@ratt7273 жыл бұрын
Have my 1970 Buick Electra Limited 225, 455, love the car
@tombrown8793 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for the Buick content guys. can you please address the rear main on these. May be do a video install of the BOP rubber seal kit. I am tired of messing with the rope seals. also please do a follow up on the """weight of the three blocks""". very interested on this. I wake up every morning to a world that is still turning, and i smile because i know there is at least one BBB still running somewhere. :) Keep em coming.
@jamesdevore30223 жыл бұрын
So what I'm hearing is Buick big blocks would make awesome mud/rock crawler engines so long as you don't hit high rpms frequently and just let the torque do its thing.
@danielgrove77826 ай бұрын
Brilliant observation
@ssgpentland82413 жыл бұрын
My dream car is a 1971 Riviera GS with a 455. My uncle has a Lamans with a 455 Olds (not the same) and its so interesting how GM built different big blocks for their various engines.
@w41duvernay3 жыл бұрын
Fantastic series, I hope the narrarator can get into difference between stage 1 heads and stage 2 heads. GM, should have put 430 engines in every SKYLARK gs, they would have kept away the Chryslers 440. GM made some great 7 liter engines.
@ericanderson86423 жыл бұрын
Looking forward to more BBB content
@fritzcaddy3 жыл бұрын
Love your content
@57rcpilot3 жыл бұрын
I remember 225 wildcat and other Buicks especially the gs nice looking car for a buick
@kevinjohnson93723 жыл бұрын
I could hear your voices eco in that block it's not every day u get to have a conversation over an engine block on a stand brings back memories
@AtZero1383 жыл бұрын
Just a reminder. Accept the Shroud Tony.. Be the SHROUD Tony.. You are the Shroud .. @Ø
@loganscharer79103 жыл бұрын
The small block olds is my favorite engine.
@capricetony3 жыл бұрын
307 Olds not much power, but durable as anything 👍
@WyoCutlass713 жыл бұрын
My 350 olds has been a great runner but I wish they weren’t so dang expensive to build to get good power out of
@cutl00senc3 жыл бұрын
My 1970 small block 350 is a blast in my 1985 cutlass. With a 3:73 posi and a four speed transmission, it’s everything it was meant to be, but never sold as such.
@69000unstopableWatts3 жыл бұрын
A 425 or 455 is the way to go in my opinion. Torque moves cars. And there is no replacement for displacement.
@pnotuner13 жыл бұрын
My buddy had a 70 Cutlass with a 350 and his dad got the AJ Foyt engine guys to do the engine. Balanced and Blue Printed and had to bore into the back end of the crank for a throwout bearing alignment tool because they converted it to a 4 speed. The thing would wake up at 3500 rpm and I think it redlined around 7 grand.
@ray23043 жыл бұрын
That side shift in oil pan rail is to make space for starter mount.
@danaglass53943 жыл бұрын
'69 Buick 400. 340 h.p 4400 rpm, 440 ft lbs torque 3200 rpm. Stock my '69 GS400 went 14.92 at 92.5 through mufflers. She weighed 4,071 lbs on a NHRA scale. 4.04" bore, same 3.90" stroke as a 430 and 455.
@cudathehawgjetfixer75203 жыл бұрын
Talking about Buick engines, I rebuilt plenty of the Buick Nail Head engines for my bosses collection of Riviera's starting from the 1963 to 1973 Boat tails, I got pretty good at pulling and installing them to, the easiest GM engine to work on was the 425 cid Nailhead out of all of them, plus they had a nice balance when swinging them around while hanging off of the cherry picker on a chain.
@Cstoreri3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Men! 1970 gs owner.
@angelobauza39642 жыл бұрын
We have a 88 M turbo on our engine makes around 1200hp no girdle. I will say it has a very good fuel system and only shifted around 6300