Hi, thank you for your answers , i can confirm the following points :
1° The engine is red .
2° The car has black bucket seats , maybe vinyl but it looks like leather .(Between the two front buckets , there is a console whose top may open and which thus act as a storage box ) .
3° Color is light gray, metallic .
4° Car has power windows .
5° Car has power seat ( driver only ) .
6° Car has Auto trunk realease , but it don't works .
7° Car has Vacuum door locks .
8° Car has rear speaker .
Yes , the diameter of the base of the air cleaner is too important to the Carter AFB carburetor , that's why one of the previous owners added between them a circular metal plate that rests on the carburetor and allows the support of air cleaner , but air cleaner gasket is missing .
By cons, it's possible to fix a Carter AFB on intake manifold due to a Quadrajet ; I am referring to the book written by Dave Emanuel and devoted to Carter carburetors, he said, I quote: " All current AFB models contains dual pattern drilling on the mounting flange , so the carbs will not only fit manifolds of the standard bolt pattern ( 5-1/8-by 5-5/8- inch originally designed for carbs such as the Holley 4150/4160 and ford/autolite 4100) , but also for spread bore models ( such as the Rochester quadra-Jet ) , wich have a 4-1/4- by 5-5/8 inch bolt pattern . "
Of course this is likely to lead to problems such as loss of power , but I would not be surprised if this is what was done with my engine, it should therefore that I can check the intake manifold serial number , to find out what it was intended caburetor.
I agree with you that the engine has been changed , but but something puzzles me, namely that the serial number on the block is incomplete (6H259417), it lacks the first six digits, which if they were there, would identify the vehicle from which the engine .
I thought these numbers might have been intentionally erased, but I see no evidence that could confirm it, and if so why let the other figures?
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