Pontiac straight-6 engine


The Pontiac straight-6 engine is a family of inline-six cylinder automobile engines produced by the Pontiac Division of General Motors Corporation in numerous versions beginning in 1926.

"Split Head" Six

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In the 1920s Oakland Motor Car engineers designed an all new engine for their "companion" make, the Pontiac that was introduced in 1926. It was a side-valve design with a one piece cast iron block with three main bearings. An unusual feature was that it had two separate cylinder heads that each covered three cylinders. The ignition distributor was mounted on top of the block in the gap between the heads. This engine was also used in GMC's T-10 and T-11 beginning in 1928.
This engine displaced with a bore and stroke of and was rated at at 2400 rpm when it was introduced. The compression ratio was 4.8:1.

200

In 1929, the "split head" Pontiac six was increased in displacement to. The horsepower rating increased to @ 3000 rpm. Compression was increased slightly to 4.9:1.
The "split-head" six was discontinued by Pontiac at the end of the 1932 model year. Pontiac offered only eight-cylinder engines during 1933 and 1934.

Flathead Six

208

In 1935, Pontiac re-introduced their six-cylinder engine, as a straight-6. The 208 was produced in 1935 and 1936. It was a side-valve design with a timing chain, as was popular at the time. This engine featured a conventional one piece cylinder head, and the distributor was moved to the side of the block. The number of main bearings was increased to four. Like the Pontiac Straight-8 engine it also featured full-pressure oiling and insert type precision main and rod bearings. These two latter features greatly increased longevity and durability especially under high speed conditions.

223 Pontiac/GMC

The 223 was a side-valve engine, and used a timing chain.
The straight-6 was used in Pontiac automobiles and GMC trucks.

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The straight-6 was similar in design to previous sixes. It was used from 1941 through 1954 only in Pontiac automobiles.

Specifications

Overhead Valve

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A overhead valve straight-6 was produced in 1964 and 1965 but was not an original Pontiac design. Sometimes confused with the Buick designed and built aluminum V8 that Pontiac had used in the two years prior, the "Pontiac 215" was an adaptation of Chevrolet's overhead valve Generation 3 straight-6. Quite different from Pontiac's previous straight-6s, it had a smaller bore than the larger Chevrolet engine and a Chevy bellhousing, but its flywheel/flexplate bolt pattern was Pontiac's.

Overhead cam

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A single overhead camshaft design was introduced by Pontiac in the 1966 model year as the standard engine in the Tempest. Offered also in 1967, the OHC 6 shared internal dimensions with the overhead valve Chevrolet straight-6 engine it was based on, but had unique cast iron block and head castings. Only the large cam carrier/valve cover was aluminum. It used jackshaft for oil pump and distributor drive. The jackshaft was driven by the fiberglass reinforced timing belt. It was offered with a single one barrel carburetor, rated at. A W53 version for the Firebird produced.
Considered advanced by Detroit engineering standards at the time, the Pontiac OHC 6 followed the Jeep Tornado I6 as the second post-World War II domestic-developed and mass-produced overhead cam automobile engine.
The Pontiac's single camshaft was supported by journals within the aluminum valve cover; no separate bearing shells were used. The cam was driven by a noise-reducing fiberglass-reinforced cogged rubber belt instead of the usual metal chain or gears. Valves were opened with finger followers that pivoted at one end on stationary hydraulic adjusters. The oil pump, distributor, and fuel pump were driven by an external jackshaft powered by a rubber timing belt nestled within an aluminum housing bolted to the right side of the block. The head had a single port face with both exhaust and intake valves on the left side and valve stems strongly tilted towards the left. This engine was used in the 1966-67 Tempest and Le Mans and 1967 Firebird.
An optional high-performance Sprint version featured high-compression pistons, hotter cam, dual valve springs, split/dual exhaust manifold, stronger coil, and the then new Rochester Quadrajet carburetor. rated at. Power was increased to in 1967.
Like other Pontiac engines of the era, the OHC 6 was not available in Canada with the exception of the Sprint version of the Firebird. Canadian-market Pontiac automobiles were equipped with the Chevrolet OHV six.

250

The OHC was enlarged to for 1968 to 1969. The base engine produced while the Sprint versions were rated up to with automatic transmissions. The versions with a manual transmission received a hotter camshaft that boosted ratings to.