Author Topic: 1100837 Alternator Stamping - Original?  (Read 27626 times)

Hans L

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Re: 1100837 Alternator Stamping - Original?
« Reply #15 on: November 03, 2013, 08:34:25 PM »
Lloyd,

Here's a clearer pic of my alternator.   Hope this helps.  Unfortunately, I don't have enough expertise to comment the one you are considering, so can't add value there.

Not sure why Photobucket rotated the picture.   I re-rotated on the site, but reverts back to this mode when I add the link.   If you click through the pick, it should display normally.



https://www.instagram.com/69camarorsz28/
'69 Camaro RS Z/28 Van Nuys Built
'69 Chevelle SS 396 4 Speed
'70 Camaro SS L78

69Z28

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Re: 1100837 Alternator Stamping - Original?
« Reply #16 on: November 03, 2013, 10:50:49 PM »
Here is my 9-E-23, still has the CZ ink stamp, 100% ORIGINAL for sure, have owned this Z28 since 1974. Its kinda scratched up from some ham fisted morron using a pry bar to tighten the belt, it still has the dated diodes and has never been apart. The 00 is faint on it too, as well as the 7 on the stamp.


Man...that's the date I need for my car. Nice.
GaryC

'UNRESTORED' 1969 Cortez Silver Z28 X33 D80

BULLITT65

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Re: 1100837 Alternator Stamping - Original?
« Reply #17 on: November 04, 2013, 03:32:50 AM »
One thing that I have noticed with a few of the originals, is it looks like they were a little heavy handed on the "A" and the "G", at least more so than the other letters for some reason. Here is the best pic of mine that I could capture with out having to remove it. (Date is 9D 3 )
1969 garnet red Z/28 46k mile unrestored X77
-Looking for 3192477 (front) spiral shocks 3192851 (rear)
-Looking for an original LOF soft ray windshield
-Looking for original Delco side post negative battery cable part # 6297651AV

basecoupe#79

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Re: 1100837 Alternator Stamping - Original?
« Reply #18 on: December 05, 2013, 07:06:10 AM »
Another example of an 9A13 to add to the mix.  And I agree with the above post when trying to find a real Alt. The As and Gs seem to always be striked hard/stamped hard.


llskis

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Re: 1100837 Alternator Stamping - Original?
« Reply #19 on: December 05, 2013, 01:45:52 PM »
Here is my 2 cents worth. Picture below is mine and OK'd by Jerry MacNeish. I talked to John Pirkle (Now Deceased) on the stampings
of alternators and he indicated that a lot where slopy stamped. Many had that "ghost" figure we see all the time. Stamping of the alt.
where not in the same ballpark as engine stampings. (Where some where stamped on the slopy side also) I think most org. are trying to
make a science out of this from a time where no one cared how the stamp was including the stamper. IMHO Larry
1969 Z28 Non-Radio and Jeriry MacNeish Certified

69Z28-RS

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Re: 1100837 Alternator Stamping - Original?
« Reply #20 on: December 05, 2013, 02:51:08 PM »
The engine deck is a flat surface, and the gang holder apparently worked well.  The alternator body is a significantly curved surface over the the length of the stamped characters, and I would not think the same kind of gang holder would work very well, but I have NO idea how it was done originally, or how the restampers do it..?
09C 69Z28-RS, 72 B 720 cowl console rosewood tint
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ko-lek-tor

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Re: 1100837 Alternator Stamping - Original?
« Reply #21 on: December 05, 2013, 02:55:20 PM »
Now I am not sure where I read this, but to my understanding, the machine that put the numbers on the casting rolled it on, so one could conclude if moving L. to Rt., pressure would be exerted down and also in a Rt. direction. When the pressure of the roller got to the end of the die more pressure was concentrated on less surface area resulting in the end letters, "A"&"G", being deeper and more pronounced and you can see in the pics the right side of the letters are elongated to the righthand direction showing the force of die roller. I also theorize that some characters (numbers-letters) were fixed in the die meaning bolted in so  they did not need to be changed as often. I say this because many stampings are heavier where the "837" is as opposed to the "1100" .  I believe that the 1100 was one set of "fixed" dies and the 837 was in another gang holder that could easily be swapped out. Don't beat me up, it is just  my theory based on observation, facts and what makes sense in production as I have an Aerospace machining background. Once the die was set up with the redundant information (everything except the date and the 837 or whatever last 3 numbers used), they would be shelved until needed and the rest of the data added explaining different boldness of characters. I should add the same pressure to surface  applies to the far Left characters as well. Also casting tolerances diameter and out of roundness affect clarity and depth of characters.
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jdv69z

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Re: 1100837 Alternator Stamping - Original?
« Reply #22 on: December 05, 2013, 03:05:31 PM »
Here's mine
Jimmy V.

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Re: 1100837 Alternator Stamping - Original?
« Reply #23 on: December 06, 2013, 04:47:07 PM »
Now I am not sure where I read this, but to my understanding, the machine that put the numbers on the casting rolled it on, so one could conclude if moving L. to Rt., pressure would be exerted down and also in a Rt. direction. When the pressure of the roller got to the end of the die more pressure was concentrated on less surface area resulting in the end letters, "A"&"G", being deeper and more pronounced and you can see in the pics the right side of the letters are elongated to the righthand direction showing the force of die roller. I also theorize that some characters (numbers-letters) were fixed in the die meaning bolted in so  they did not need to be changed as often. I say this because many stampings are heavier where the "837" is as opposed to the "1100" .  I believe that the 1100 was one set of "fixed" dies and the 837 was in another gang holder that could easily be swapped out. Don't beat me up, it is just  my theory based on observation, facts and what makes sense in production as I have an Aerospace machining background. Once the die was set up with the redundant information (everything except the date and the 837 or whatever last 3 numbers used), they would be shelved until needed and the rest of the data added explaining different boldness of characters. I should add the same pressure to surface  applies to the far Left characters as well. Also casting tolerances diameter and out of roundness affect clarity and depth of characters.
That sounds like pretty good reasoning. 
1969 garnet red Z/28 46k mile unrestored X77
-Looking for 3192477 (front) spiral shocks 3192851 (rear)
-Looking for an original LOF soft ray windshield
-Looking for original Delco side post negative battery cable part # 6297651AV

69Z28freak

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Re: 1100837 Alternator Stamping - Original?
« Reply #24 on: December 12, 2013, 08:32:20 AM »
I am no expert, but all of the 7's posted in this thread so far look to be the same to me. With Consistent tail curve.
Mike 1969 Grandma Camaro

KurtS

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Re: 1100837 Alternator Stamping - Original?
« Reply #25 on: December 16, 2013, 11:38:27 PM »
Alternators and distributors were roll stamped. All digits were removable in the stamp.
Never thought to take a pic of the stampers that we used at work  - for both alt's and dist's no less.
Kurt S
CRG

Edgemontvillage

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Re: 1100837 Alternator Stamping - Original?
« Reply #26 on: December 17, 2013, 05:26:00 PM »
Lloyd,

Here's a clearer pic of my alternator.   Hope this helps.  Unfortunately, I don't have enough expertise to comment the one you are considering, so can't add value there.

Not sure why Photobucket rotated the picture.   I re-rotated on the site, but reverts back to this mode when I add the link.   If you click through the pick, it should display normally.




Thanks for posting Hans, although your 837 has been restored certain of the characters are unmistakeably distinct and unique to the original stamping set.

 

anything