The same is true of the 64 Tascabird which the Bopper did get thru the Wixom assembly line masquerading as a 390 but did get a 427 Medium riser powerplant which my father did several modifications to and did eventually have to replace because it developed cracks on the flanges, which my father says was common on the 427. John was was laughing about how the stories get convoluted over time in particular how he occasionally is given credit for the KR8, see the Mecum right up when CJ's come across the block, when that was my fathers project. My father built the KR8 and will be an opening night speaker in August at the Cobra Jet 50th anniversary. He moved his tool station out of the dealership yesterday to home with the aid of a local towing company(Coletta) and was surprised to run into John Healy, who was visiting, and the 2 got a chance to go back in time and reminisce about the old days. My father is Bill Gilbert, just retired and longest tenured employee of Tasca and builder and tuner of all the Bopper's personal and prototype builds. Hi guys I know its an old topic but I thought it appropriate to pick up where it left off. LOL.Ĭool car, amazing how nice those birds look when you iron them before painting. Wouldn't such an obscure car deserve a stock resoration? Finaly, I say cream for the interior. More custom factory work? You can slip one sheet of paper between the cover and the booster on mine and I have about 1/8" clearance on the rockers inside the cover. I had to notch my cover to clear the booster when I went with Ersons and Mooneye covers. Those valve covers will not clear the stock set up. If RPM's are the main advantage of a 427 then a 428 might be a better, but not cooler choice? I'm also wondering what they did on this car to clear the master/booster. ![]() Seems that would be required also on a 427 and I can't see the factory bending up custom exhaust for any car let alone a t-bird. I also had plenty of issues unning 2-1/2" pipe on the car. Can't say about a factory car,but have an old mag article about one that Tasca Ford built,and they were offering to the public,but they were built in house.Now if they ever sold one I'm not sure.I'll try and find the old article,was in one of those many 60's car mags that are long gone.I wonder if you could really benefit from a 427? The stock logs were awful and the FPA's while better, aren't exactly ideal.
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