Actually I'm not sure the warping was the main problem with the aluminum manifold. Here's a quote from an article on the Super Six:
"The factory installed both cast iron and aluminum intake manifolds, the cast iron unit being far more common. There is some dispute about the quality of the factory aluminum Super Six manifolds. The aluminum manifolds installed by Chrysler in the 1970s were die-cast as two pieces and then welded together. Some owners have reported that these e-beam welded aluminum intake manifolds suffer from pinhole vacuum leaks due to poor welds and/or porous casting."
I have extra cast iron super six intake and exhaust manifolds and kick down linkage from my slant six Dutra Dualed pickup project. There here somewhere. I really have to clean up the garage one of these days. LOL
Dan----- Original Message ----- From: <spigot2039@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <1962to1965mopars@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Sunday, January 27, 2008 8:32 PM Subject: Re: A couple questions on my 63 Dodge 330
I was told not to use the aluminum super six version as it tended to warp, fwiw....Gary H. -----Original Message-----you can go with a late model super six manifold,,,,,,,,,,,,they can usuallybe found in most junk yards, and will also be able to get all the correctlinkage to hook everything up, should be cheaper than an adapter and making allthe linkage to work
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