Title: 1.2HF Cylinder head Post by: Philm on 18 May, 2009, 08:19:39 PM I seem to have come into a 1.2HF cylinder head- 818-140 cast on the head and 1967 stamped as a casting date. I have no specific need for it as both my Zagato's are 1.3's I have no ideas as to the desirability of this item and would be more interested in a good home for it. Any interest?
Title: Re: 1.2HF Cylinder head Post by: chugga boom on 18 May, 2009, 08:45:52 PM i think these are fairly common as i have atleast 1 that i no of, they were fitted to some series 1 and early series 2 1.3 engines , thought i'd hit the jack pot when i saw it but found out my dad also had 1 and another friend also had 1 ::) sorry to put a dampner on your find
Title: Re: 1.2HF Cylinder head Post by: Philm on 18 May, 2009, 08:49:00 PM It's no dampner, I am curious though about it being in 1.3 engine as I though the bore was different; 76-v-77mm. Not a lot granted but difference non the less.
Title: Re: 1.2HF Cylinder head Post by: Jai Sharma on 19 May, 2009, 02:55:17 PM Hi Phil,
I went through the same process some years ago. If I remember correctly, the best plan is to check the rest of the part number. I certainly had at least one 1.3 S2 car with an 818-140 casting. Jai Title: Re: 1.2HF Cylinder head Post by: ncundy on 19 May, 2009, 04:24:22 PM It must be a Lancia thing - not much inventory control! I was going through a load of Aurelia heads the other day with my father some S4, some S5 and some S6. All had the same casting date and number (1954) but different machining to suit the different series.
I can just imagine the casting department going hell for leather over one side of the site to hit their bonus, with not a thought nor managment intervention for what was coming out of the gates at the other end ;D I wonder how many remained and were scrapped when production ended ? Title: Re: 1.2HF Cylinder head Post by: fay66 on 19 May, 2009, 11:43:53 PM That would be normal in motor manufacturing, you only changed casting & part numbers when it was no longer suitable for that model, they were usually designed with enough meat on them to allow for extended use throughout the life of that particular design of engine.
Brian 8227 8) |