Bob Bleed loves Stromberg 97 !

We consider ourselves very fortunate here at Stromberg 97 Carburetor to have so many great folks out there who really appreciate what we do, and tell us! We feel that goodwill every day through the great feedback we get on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and here on our blog. And it keeps us moving forward, developing new stuff and improving our current product range too. Our buddy (the Mad Fabricators guy) Piero De Luca got together with Bobby Bleed (Midwest Fabrication) recently. They put this together without our knowledge, posted it up on our Vimeo channel and then sent it to us yesterday. These kind words from a guy like Bobby, and Piero’s awesome creative work to get it done, made us all feel 10 feet taller. Thanks guys. We appreciate it. You are the best. You really are. Seriously. No, really. You guys. We love you.

More Painted Stromberg 97s

While our Black & Chrome 97s have been very popular this year, we’ve had more orders for painted Stromberg 97s in other colours recently. Here are a few examples, each one an awesome job by our friends at The Paintbox. The white tripower is destined for a 50’s style Model A, also painted white. The Ford maroon 3×2 is going onto a blown flathead and the Chevy Orange set are going in a shop truck…sadly not ours.

Stromberg 6×2 Sports Rod!

photo redHow much do we love a 1950’s Sports Rod?!  And what better than a Chevy powered Sports Rod with six 97s? Scooter Gabel send us some pictures of the Wright Special that he’s currently restoring back to its former glory and, as you can see, it’s pretty complete considering it’s over 50 years since young Johnny Wright put it together. According to this August 1960 Hot Rod Magazine feature, it had a bored and stroked 328 inch ’57 Corvette motor with an Edelbrock Stromberg 6×2 intake, an aluminum hand-formed body and a Halibrand quick-change rear end. Sadly the induction system was missing, but the intake appears to be an Edelbrock ML C67 so Scooter’s on the hunt for one right now.

He also says that the car’s craftsmanship and build quality is far beyond anything from the mid ’50s he’s been around before, and it has timing tags from El Mirage at 143+ MPH, so that speaks volumes for the car! I am sure we’ll see more pics when she’s back on the track.

A new Stromberg EX-2 carburetor for Auburn V12

DSC_6579Like most new business projects, it started with an email from someone we didn’t know. A simple question along the lines of, “We’ve seen your new Stromberg 97. Can you make us some new Stromberg EX-2 carburetors for Auburn V12.” Like most of the answers we give, it was a “yes but…” kind of response. As in, Yes, we can…But have you seen the cost of zinc die-cast tooling lately… and how many do you want?

To cut a long story short, we have made what must be one of the first short-run reproduction carburetors ever. The super rare (as in pretty much unobtainium) single barrel Stromberg EX-2, as used exclusively on 1933-4 Auburn V12.

How did we do it? Mostly with modern prototyping technologies, starting with a real and hugely valuable original. The key parts are the cast iron bases (right and left handed, as the V12 uses two carbs), the bowl section and the stamped steel lid for the float chamber. First we stripped it down and worked out exactly how all the circuits worked. Then we 3D scanned it to give us help with the shapes, and measured every dimension, thread and circuit by hand. Then we built complete new 3D models in Solidworks – of all four pieces – adapting the design where we could to use Stromberg 97 parts inside where they were compatible, did a better job and avoided us making even more short-run (ie expensive) parts.

The moulds for the cast iron bases were made using modern resin tooling – nothing too taxing there. The same with the float chamber lids, though this was special short-run press tooling, finished off with a one-off marking tool to press the lettering, and a little turned breather riveted on just before paint.

The bowl castings though, are very special. In a nutshell, with zinc die-cast tooling prohibitively expensive (unless you’re making many thousands), we turned to short run prototype investment casting using 3D-printed resin SLA models as the basis for our tooling. That’s the translucent white thing in our pictures. Through a series of positive and negative moulds, and careful accounting for shrinkage and expansion, our supplier (ie someone far smarter than us) made beautiful new Auburn V12 carburetor bowls with incredible correct detail and surface finish. It didn’t quite finish there though, as we also completed the base castings with EX-2-specific shafts, throttle brackets, screws, gaskets and throttle plates. We then fitted all the parts from an original EX-2 into the new castings, proving how good the reproductions are.

After CNC machining, painting, endless checks and running tests, we shipped the first pair to our customer in Indiana, USA, and by the time we got ourselves out there in person, the guys had them mounted on the Auburn V12 and running up the road. Mission Accomplished.

Need a pair for your Auburn V12? You need to speak to Vivian Lavine at Lavine Restorations, 1349 Beech Rd, Nappanee, IN 46550, USA . You can call them on (574) 773-7561.