Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

I have what I think is a pair of unused R3 headers.  Three pictures are attached.  Please help to answer a few questions. 

-The left and right look exactly the same. 

-These don't have the alternator bracket sticking out of the front of the passenger side. 

-There is a part number 1558353 cast on the right horizontal face on each.   On the other front face is cast 206-86. 

-Pictures of the reproductions don't seem to have a number.

What do I have?  What models do these fit?  

Thanks

5bd33977-5042-4a6e-828d-4b91c4ae777b.jpg

271d5a57-0b5d-47ea-a8d2-e227d0d5c989.jpg

337e51fe-7e47-45cf-9950-e8f0034b881a.jpg

Edited by Avanti1963!
Posted

Not sure, but I’d guess you own the real McCoy… Amazing how, after all these years, rare parts like these still turn up !

Posted

They appear to have been port matched. They certainly look original issue but I think the Lionel Stone versions were cast from the same tooling so I think those had the numbers also.

Posted

Left & right exhaust manifolds ARE identical on ALL Studebaker Avantis, whether standard R1-R2 manifolds or R3-R4 "headers."  There was no need for a boss for an alternator bracket on Avanti manifolds.

Your R3-R4 manifolds will fit any Studebaker V8 from 1955 through 1964, whether 224, 259, 289, R1, R2, R3, or R4.

I have a set of Studebaker International's reproduction R3 headers and they have no numbers or letters cast into them, so yours are not the most recent repros. 

--Dwight

Posted

One of our Stude venders showed me a pair of R3 type exhaust headers cast in aluminum…. Not sure how that worked out.

Posted
17 hours ago, Nelson said:

They appear to have been port matched. They certainly look original issue but I think the Lionel Stone versions were cast from the same tooling so I think those had the numbers also.

 

From what I've always understood Lionel Stone's repops showed a lot of flashing and required some work to get them to fit properly.  

Posted
4 hours ago, mfg said:

One of our Stude venders showed me a pair of R3 type exhaust headers cast in aluminum…. Not sure how that worked out.

 

Back in the early '60s when Pontiac was a force on the drag strips...the days of their "Swiss cheese frames" to lighten the car...they also had aluminum headers.  Supposedly one could always tell when one of these cars made a run due to the molten aluminum drops on the track.  

Posted
13 hours ago, mfg said:

One of our Stude venders showed me a pair of R3 type exhaust headers cast in aluminum…. Not sure how that worked out.

Dave Thibeault had some cast in aluminum a few years ago.  Dave generally does things well.

--Dwight

Posted

Not sure aluminum is good material for exhaust manifolds.  According to sources on the internet, pure Aluminum melts around 1200°  with most alloys melting sooner. Exhaust manifolds can reach 1200° - 1800° under hard acceleration, extended high speed driving. Not much room for error.

Posted

I’m not certain but StuV may have made the first set and that tooling could have been acquired by Studebaker or it may have been the other way around. I had or probably still have a set that has the name StuV cast into the header.

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...