Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted
16 hours ago, Nelson said:

Anybody know when the salt and pepper carpet was dropped in favor of the solid black?

R4892 was first Avanti built with all the  original ‘64  factory updates.  (minor additional changes came even later)

That serial number may be your answer.

Posted

Actually the 64 changes were on an EX prototype car made long before R4892. One of the last ones Gary Johnson is finishing up. 

Posted
4 hours ago, brad said:

Actually the 64 changes were on an EX prototype car made long before R4892. One of the last ones Gary Johnson is finishing up. 

I believe Nelson was referring to changes phased in on the Avanti production line?

Posted

A friend owns a real nice white ‘64 Stude Avanti, that features a full claret interior, black carpeting, and the ‘woodgrain’ steering wheel & dash pieces…… Absolutely beautiful!

Posted
On 8/31/2025 at 3:35 PM, brad said:

Actually the 64 changes were on an EX prototype car made long before R4892. One of the last ones Gary Johnson is finishing up. 

By the way Brad…. On a different note…. The Carter carb letters WCFB Stand for ‘White Cast Four Barrel’!

Posted
On 9/3/2025 at 3:48 AM, mfg said:

By the way Brad…. On a different note…. The Carter carb letters WCFB Stand for ‘White Cast Four Barrel’!

Will Carter four Barrel?

 

Posted
5 hours ago, Zedman said:

Will Carter four Barrel?

 

‘White Cast’ refers to material carb is made of.

Posted

The Carburetor Shop LLC

204 East 15th Street

Eldon, Missouri 65026

 

WCFB

 

The WCFB was Carter’s first attempt at a four-barrel carburetor. It was introduced in 1952. A total of 222 different WCFB models were made in the years 1952 through 1967. The WCFB was discontinued after the 1967 model year. I have seen a number of different meanings for the WCFB acronym. One employee of Carter once told me that it meant “wrought cast four barrel”; and used that terminology for years. However, a close friend who worked most of his life for Carter, chastised me for using this terminology. It seems the official Carter meaning was Will Carter Four Barrel (Will Carter of course being the inventor that started the Carter Carburetor Company). So I now use this designation when asked.

Hemmings.com Logo

Carter Carburetors began manufacturing the model WCFB four-barrel in the early Fifties, General Motors started using the “William Carter Four Barrel” as standard equipment in 1952, and Packard opted to use the WCFB four-barrel carburetor as original equipment in 1953. Chrysler adopted the same Carter unit in ’54. These were popular with many original manufacturers; in fact, the WCFB series carburetors were still used on many Corvettes up until 1964. However, their weight, at over 17 pounds, suggested that a lighter carburetor with the same progressive 4-barrel characteristics was needed.

Posted

Personally, I do not agree… as the above information is  from a knowledgeable person who is basing his opinion on heresay.

I always thought that the ‘AFB’ designation on Carter AFB carburetors stood for ‘Aluminum Four Barrel’…. regalbob will no doubt come back with info that indicates that ‘AFB’ stands for ‘Anderson Four Barrel’!!!!!!!!

No, ‘WCFB’ stands for ‘White Cast Four Barrel. (my opinion)

Also, I highly doubt that a Carter WCFB carburetor, although heavy, weighs “over seventeen pounds”!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...