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BUSY BOLTERS Are you one? The Shop Area
continues to pull in the most views on the Stovebolt. In August alone there were over 22,000 views in those 13 forums.
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4 members (VEW, GMCJammer51, 2 invisible),
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Global Mod,
Mod | | Forums66 Topics126,777 Posts1,039,270 Members48,100 | Most Online2,175 Jul 21st, 2025 | | | Joined: Feb 2001 Posts: 95 'Bolter | 'Bolter Joined: Feb 2001 Posts: 95 | I'm working on a 1948 3600, 216 with a tall AC canister oil filter.
The fitting on the block is a brass "T" where the male threads go into the block and there are two female threads for output.
My question. On the output side, the treads are the same size, but one has a much smaller passage or "hole" than the other. Does the output with the small hole go to the filter or the gauge?
Thanks | | | | Joined: Jun 2004 Posts: 8,597 Riding in the Passing Lane | Riding in the Passing Lane Joined: Jun 2004 Posts: 8,597 | Use the small hole for the gauge. It just shows pressure. There is no flow. If the line or gauge would leak it will be a small leak & won't dump all the oil at once. They say money can't buy happiness. It can buy old Chevy trucks though. Same thing. 1972 Chevy c10 Cheyenne SuperIn the Gallery Forum | | | | Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 9,112 'Bolter | 'Bolter Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 9,112 | On my oil filter setup, there is a restriction inside, in the center pipe of about 1/16" or smaller. Somewhere in your setup, you need that restriction. The gauge will work off either feed. | | | | Joined: Feb 2001 Posts: 95 'Bolter | 'Bolter Joined: Feb 2001 Posts: 95 | I was thinking the smaller hole would be for the oil filter. | | |
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