Body interior shell-floor panel danaged?
Forum: C3 Electrical, Body and Interior
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p
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Send PMToledo, OH - USA
Joined: 9/4/2002
Posts: 147
Vette(s): 1976 Stingray, L48 auto Buckskin/Buckskin Leather originally. Numbers matching.
Cats were added the year before, 1975, along with HEI.
1976 the steel added rigidity to the body and isolation from heat generated from hotter running engines. The heat factor comes from the fact that the engines were calibrated to run hotter to increase efficiency and to partially offset emission related power losses.
1976 the steel added rigidity to the body and isolation from heat generated from hotter running engines. The heat factor comes from the fact that the engines were calibrated to run hotter to increase efficiency and to partially offset emission related power losses.
'76 L48 Auto
Project
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g
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Send PMBRADENTON, FL - USA
Joined: 8/4/2002
Posts: 669
Vette(s): 1972 convertible 350 auto trans, delux int, air, ps, pb, t/t wheel, pw, 79,000 org miles Rare one year only color
yes you are correct, cats were added in 75, i was just quoting the corvette black book that the metal floor pans were added to contain the heat from the cats and that info shows under the improvements for the 76 models
|UPDATED|6/1/2003 3:37:36 PM|/UPDATED|
|UPDATED|6/1/2003 3:37:36 PM|/UPDATED|
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p
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Send PMToledo, OH - USA
Joined: 9/4/2002
Posts: 147
Vette(s): 1976 Stingray, L48 auto Buckskin/Buckskin Leather originally. Numbers matching.
| garry72conv said: yes you are correct, cats were added in 75, i was just quoting the corvette black book that the metal floor pans were added to contain the heat from the cats and that info shows under the improvements for the 76 models |
Garry, I wasn't trying to be a "know it all", actually I was getting the info I posted from my copy of the Black Book, and it doesn't mention the Cats as the heat reason.....we obviously have different editions 
'76 L48 Auto
Project
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P
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Send PMWayne, NJ - USA
Joined: 5/31/2002
Posts: 973
Vette(s): White 1975 L48 Stingray 129,000 Miles, daily driver.
My bet is that the heat of the cats annoyed enough drivers of the 1975 and they complained enough that the steel pans were a stopgap solution for GM. MY 75 gets far hotter than I imagined possible. No A/C :)
Scot
Scot

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Lifetime Member
Send PMSHELBYVILLE, TN - USA
Joined: 7/5/2002
Posts: 3944
Vette(s): 1976 L48 auto
1978 L82 4speed
1994 LT1 6speed
1978 L82 4speed
1994 LT1 6speed
scot my fool pans both rusted out the steel pan go from tfirwall to behind seat replace with glass matting work for me sunshine corvette of fl. where going to make pans for the (75&76) G.M stop them jim

|UPDATED|6/3/2003 9:42:12 PM|/UPDATED|

|UPDATED|6/3/2003 9:42:12 PM|/UPDATED|
StingrayJim Jr
NCM Lifetime Member #1936
Stingray's '76���������������������������� StingrayJr's '78���������������������������Lil Red '94 

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I am helping a friend with his 76. The 76-77 pans are regular uncoated sheet metal. We bought a pan from a 79, I believe, that is galvanized. We cut the old one out just below where it rolls over at the sills and intend to pop-rivet the later one in (it was cut at sill level). It looks slightly different, but dimensionally the same. He is building a new house and has gotten side-tracked for the moment, but someday we will get it back in. This may be an easier solution than a roll of metal and a welder.
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in Forum: C3 Electrical, Body and Interior
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