Jump to content

Cosworth Pre X Flow 1340 engine color


Gearbox

Recommended Posts

Hi Dean;

 

Unfortunately, that is not my car lol. But I do agree, that Red/Burgundy does look good with the wrinkle black Cosy cover. The gearbox on these cars were the 2000e like on my Elans, and they were always either Black or really Dark Green.

 

I have several books on the Seven, and in no place it mentions the engine color, and of course every period photo of the engine is in Black and white, so no help there. I believe in 1962, Ford did not start using its trademark Blue yet, and I am thinking they were painted either black or gray. I am sure that Lotus would not have changed the stock color of these engines, but not sure if Cosworth painted them in a different color. Not sure what I am going to do yet, but it would be nice to know how these cars came from the factory. Thanks Allan

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i believe they were black, though have now absolute confirmation, I have seen one pretty original car that was black, and have had conversations with those who ought to know, and that was the thought

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The best period picture I could find was an old ad for the Super Seven which looks like the Cosy valve cover was bare aluminum and the block was something else than black. Red maybe? Most Ford engines back in the early 60's were painted Black or Gray, so maybe Gray? Unfortunately the Black and white photo doesn't reveal much more and any color pictures I found were just of the outside of the car. Any original owners out there?

109E%20Cosworth%20Details%20in%20Brochure.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm pretty sure that the engines (both head and block/pan) were dark red in color with bare as-cast aluminum for the valve cover. I will ask next time that I visit The Octagon in a few weeks. For reference, here is a picture of an SCA engine from about the same early/mid-'60's period that I took during my last visit about 3 weeks ago:

14382187847_ef13ba63c5_b.jpg

The head on the SCA is aluminum, hence the as-cast coloring. I think that the red on this example is brighter than they were using back in the day. Note that the SCA is built around a one litre (998cc) 5-main bearing Kent block.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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...