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Re: Value of 3.0 12V



A good, low milage 12V 3-liter (especially one from a Milano) is worth anywhere from around $1200 to about $1600 but a super low milage engine or one which has recently been overhauled and blueprinted could be worth more than $2000.

The problem with the 24-valve is the fact that that it came from a FWD car and thus must be extensively modified (the distributor must be moved, and an Alfetta oil pan must be fitted). The biggest problem that you are going to have is with the FI system. The 24-Valve engine uses Bosh Motronic, not L-Jetronic like the GTV-6/Milano. Since the intake runners and plenums were designed for a FWD car with the engine mounted laterally in the engine compartment, getting them to fit in the GTV-6 with the engine turned around 90 degrees is problematical. The conversion that I have seen required that a 'U'- shaped aluminum inlet runner be fabricated so that the AFM can be placed beside the now longitudinally situated engine (although I have heard that some people have punched a hole in the firewall to let the stock straight runner stick through it and into the glove-box where the AFM and conical air filter are re-located!). There are other engineering problems as well. The 24-valve 3.0 Liter Alfa engine, with its dual overhead cam design is taller than the 12-valve. This means that it will NOT clear the stock GTV-6 brake booster. The fix for this, I've been told, involves replacing the stock brake booster canister with one from a Spider, which is smaller in diameter. What modifications to clutch and brake actuators this requires, I do not know. I also do not know what the effect (if any) there is to the GTV-6's braking performance. But I do know that after one shoe-horns this engine into the GTV-6, that one cannot reach the oil filler cap because it ends up UNDER the aforementioned brake booster due to the FWD layout of the original engine configuration (in the FWD 164, the oil filler is on the right-hand side of the front bank of cams. When the engine is rotated to the left by 90 degrees to put the output shaft of the engine toward the rear of the car, the oil filler ends up on the left rear of the engine -and right under the brake booster. It is possible to close-off the factory oil filler in the valve cover, and cut another one on the other side, but I don't know what that entails beside some aluminum welding. There are probably more pitfalls to such a conversion, but I've just seen it done, and have not done it myself. The expert is probably Larry Dickman Jr. of Alfa Parts Exchange in Tracy CA. He's the one who's conversion I've been describing, and these pitfalls were the ones explained to me by him. If you are determined to go this route, I'd contact Larry first were I you. I hope this helps.

George Graves
'86 GTV-6
now with 3.0 liter 'S' engine
and Power Steering


On Wednesday, March 12, 2003, at 07:42 PM, alfa-digest wrote:


Date: Wed, 12 Mar 2003 16:54:51 -0800 (PST)
From: Zamani Zambri <[email protected]>
Subject: Value of 3.0 12V

I wonder how much a 3.0 12V is worth these days? I am thinking of
putting in a 3.0 24V in my car. I will run Autronic. That should give
me about 260 bhp with stock internals, and possibly Beninca headers.

The 3.0 12V has good valve guides and seals (done in 2000), new main
and rod bearings, colombo 104.294 cams, SZ headers, 37mm intake
runners. If I include the S-pistons (not installed) would $3K be a good
price? Should be good for 230 bhp (if you run Autronic).

Anyways, not sure what the plans are. I could put in a 2.0TS with a
turbo (irresistable with a few TS engines sitting in the garage).
Hmmm.....

Zamani
Yahoo! Web Hosting - establish your business online
http://webhosting.yahoo.com


George Graves
'86 GTV-6
now with 3.0 liter 'S' engine
and Power Steering
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