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Which came first, Tri Power or Six Pack?

Started by bull, January 29, 2006, 06:02:24 AM

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bull

I was just wondering who beat whom to the punch in the "three-twos" category, GM or Chrysler? The Six Pack was mid-year '69 but did the GM version come sooner?

hemihead

GM with the Tri Power.But it had mechanical progressive kickdown where Mopar used vacuum.
Lots of people talkin' , few of them know
Soul of a woman was created below
  Led Zeppelin

Ghoste

I'm afraid Ford beat us to the punch as well.  I'm not sure if the Ford Tri Power was vacuum or mechanical though.
Now here's a question and everybody knows the answer; others did it first, but which one became legendary?

Johnny SixPack

Ford did have a Tri-Power option that was first available on "62 390 T-birds (I know, because my carbs came off of one).

But it seems Pontiac offered a Tri-Power option for their 347 cid engines (only mated to automatics) as far back as "57. LINK

Chysler didn't make a 6-pack option available until the "70 model year I believe.
Johnny's Herd:
'69 Charger SE, '70 Charger R/T SE 496 Six Pack, '72 Chrysler Imperial LeBaron, '74 International Scout II, '85 Ford F-250 Diesel, '97 Lincoln Town Car Signature Series

"If everyone is thinking alike, then someone isn't thinking." - Gen. George S. Patton Jr.

"If its got tits or tires, you're going to have trouble with it." - Unknown

Got Dodge Fever? There's only one cure.....Charger!

Ghoste

Oh you 70 guys, always trying to plug that one swan song year.  1969 1/2 Super Bee and Road Runner??

Johnny SixPack

Quote from: Ghoste on January 29, 2006, 06:46:23 AM
I'm afraid Ford beat us to the punch as well.  I'm not sure if the Ford Tri Power was vacuum or mechanical though.
Now here's a question and everybody knows the answer; others did it first, but which one became legendary?

The Ford Tri-Power is a full mechanical setup.

I'd say Chrysler's later version became more legendary, and even if I'm wrong, I'm almost positive it was the most powerful.
Johnny's Herd:
'69 Charger SE, '70 Charger R/T SE 496 Six Pack, '72 Chrysler Imperial LeBaron, '74 International Scout II, '85 Ford F-250 Diesel, '97 Lincoln Town Car Signature Series

"If everyone is thinking alike, then someone isn't thinking." - Gen. George S. Patton Jr.

"If its got tits or tires, you're going to have trouble with it." - Unknown

Got Dodge Fever? There's only one cure.....Charger!

Johnny SixPack

Quote from: Ghoste on January 29, 2006, 07:03:18 AM
Oh you 70 guys, always trying to plug that one swan song year.  1969 1/2 Super Bee and Road Runner??

True enough.

I always forget about those silly mid-year models. :D

And it seems Chrysler offered a 3x2 option on the "57 Desoto Red Ram Hemi.

The plot thickens?
Johnny's Herd:
'69 Charger SE, '70 Charger R/T SE 496 Six Pack, '72 Chrysler Imperial LeBaron, '74 International Scout II, '85 Ford F-250 Diesel, '97 Lincoln Town Car Signature Series

"If everyone is thinking alike, then someone isn't thinking." - Gen. George S. Patton Jr.

"If its got tits or tires, you're going to have trouble with it." - Unknown

Got Dodge Fever? There's only one cure.....Charger!

Ghoste

Well it (Chrysler's later version) was on a bigger engine and it was part of a complete package.  My question was more or less rhetorical though.  It seems that everyone has heard of the Six Pack (just look at the recent B-J Super Bee) but outside of people that are into them, not many have heard the Tri Power setups.

Johnny SixPack

Quote from: Ghoste on January 29, 2006, 07:16:38 AM
It seems that everyone has heard of the Six Pack...

I liked 'em so much, I bought one.  :icon_smile_big:
Johnny's Herd:
'69 Charger SE, '70 Charger R/T SE 496 Six Pack, '72 Chrysler Imperial LeBaron, '74 International Scout II, '85 Ford F-250 Diesel, '97 Lincoln Town Car Signature Series

"If everyone is thinking alike, then someone isn't thinking." - Gen. George S. Patton Jr.

"If its got tits or tires, you're going to have trouble with it." - Unknown

Got Dodge Fever? There's only one cure.....Charger!

charge70

Caddy had it in the late 50's,58-59 to be exact,outboard carbs were vacuum operated.Rare cars not to many built.

hemihead

The GTO Tripower was very popular, maybe just as much as Mopar.
Lots of people talkin' , few of them know
Soul of a woman was created below
  Led Zeppelin

HDCharger

If nothing else the "Six Pack" just sounds a hell of alot cooler.
MSG, US Army, Retired
1973 Charger SE
1976 Stepside Powerwagon
2007 Ram 1500 Laramie
2002 Jeep Wrangler Sport
1967 Dodge Truck

hemihead

Yeah Ma Mopar cornered the market with that name.  :icon_smile_tongue:
Lots of people talkin' , few of them know
Soul of a woman was created below
  Led Zeppelin

tttaziz

FWIW,

Only Dodge used the "Six Pack"  on the 340 and 440 engines.  Plymouth used variations of "Six Barrel" or "440+6".

Charger_Fan

Quote from: hemihead on January 29, 2006, 09:13:17 AM
Yeah Ma Mopar cornered the market with that name.  :icon_smile_tongue:
:iagree: Mopar had all the cooler names. :thumbs:

BTW, Ford had the progressive linkage on their systems...and guys who didn't know their stuff had a hard time getting them all to open when they were supposed to. As far as I know, all the GM's has a non-progressive setup.
Mopar had the most user friendly setup, for sure. :yesnod:

The Aquamax...yes, this bike spent 2 nights underwater one weekend. (Not my doing), but it gained the name, and has since become pseudo-famous. :)

greenpigs

Quote from: charge70 on January 29, 2006, 07:59:52 AM
Caddy had it in the late 50's,58-59 to be exact,outboard carbs were vacuum operated.Rare cars not to many built.

I was thinking the same thing, seems the little old lady down the street from my parents had on in her garage. After she passed they sold the car and I was there when it was getting towed and the tri-power intake-carbs were in the back seat. It was a black 2 door, can't remember if it was a convertible.
1969 Charger RT


Living Chevy free

73ChargerSE

The '57 Olds had the J-2 package that was 3x2's. I'm not sure how long this carried on though.

hemigeno

I looked in my books, and could not find a reference to a 3x2 setup for Dodge, Chrysler or Desoto on their early Hemi or Polysphere offerings.  Seems they only did single 2bbl, and single or dual 4bbl factory setups until the 6-pack/6bbl came out in early/mid 1969.

There were aftermarket 3x2 setups, though.  I know Edelbrock, Weiand and Offenhauser had several different intakes back in the late 50's for Hemi, Polysphere and Spitfire motors, including triple twos.  All of these were aftermarket offerings, from what I can see.

Chrysler may have come late to that party, but they stole the show once they got there...


Johnny SixPack

Quote from: hemigeno on January 29, 2006, 04:03:44 PM
I looked in my books, and could not find a reference to a 3x2 setup for Dodge, Chrysler or Desoto on their early Hemi or Polysphere offerings.  Seems they only did single 2bbl, and single or dual 4bbl factory setups until the 6-pack/6bbl came out in early/mid 1969.

There were aftermarket 3x2 setups, though.  I know Edelbrock, Weiand and Offenhauser had several different intakes back in the late 50's for Hemi, Polysphere and Spitfire motors, including triple twos.  All of these were aftermarket offerings, from what I can see.

Chrysler may have come late to that party, but they stole the show once they got there...



Same thing I found when I went and delved deeper today.

I must have just seen a reference for an aftermarket intake for the Red Ram Hemi.

Thanks for the info, Geno. :cheers:
Johnny's Herd:
'69 Charger SE, '70 Charger R/T SE 496 Six Pack, '72 Chrysler Imperial LeBaron, '74 International Scout II, '85 Ford F-250 Diesel, '97 Lincoln Town Car Signature Series

"If everyone is thinking alike, then someone isn't thinking." - Gen. George S. Patton Jr.

"If its got tits or tires, you're going to have trouble with it." - Unknown

Got Dodge Fever? There's only one cure.....Charger!

derailed

Quote from: hemihead on January 29, 2006, 08:49:12 AM
The GTO Tripower was very popular, maybe just as much as Mopar.
:iagree: The old 389 and 3 deuces was a nice setup I had 2 tri power setups at one point and sold them for next to nothing around 6 years ago. :image_294343:

hemihead

Yeah the first Hemis where only 2,4,2x4 from the factory, I missed reading that one at first.  :rotz:
Lots of people talkin' , few of them know
Soul of a woman was created below
  Led Zeppelin

Dodge-Charger

QuoteI'd say Chrysler's later version became more legendary, and even if I'm wrong, I'm almost positive it was the most powerful.

I think that the 65 GTO 389 Tripower was and is still the most legendary. It is still considered the start of the Muscle Car era. ( Muscle Car, Big motor in a mid sized car ) Yes belive it or not the 65 GTO was considered MID sized back then.

derailed


67RedCharger

1958 GM came out with the tri power setup with vacuum linkage (slider valve on the center carb) that operated a diaphram that pulled in the secondary carbs.  Back then the word was to get rid of the vacuum linkage and install the progressive linkage for  more responsive control of the carburators.  I'm restoring a 59 Impala Convertible with a 348 tri power setup (hydrolic lifters 280hp, with solid lifters it is 335hp)  My linkage is progressive but I also have the slider valve on the center carb for the originality nuts to look at.  Since everyone back then canned the slider valves, and went progressive, there are very few slider valves left to be found.  I looked on Ebay for 4 years, with no luck finding one.  Found one at a local yocal's habitat.

  ~ 67RedCharger ~
Original Owner "Ole Red" 1967 Red Dodge Charger

derailed

the 66 tri power setup I had was vacuum actuated secondaries and never really did seam to work worth a damn. I liked the progressive linkage ones better.