Thanks CrossBoss,
Indeed - you beat me to it given I thought of updating my message across the day that was. The inlet runners underneath whatever carburetor configuration is employed pick up charge if you will from near the opposite bank of the vee - hence 'cross' and 'ram' too. Besides, the Smokey Ram is appreciated as a single 4 bbl intake design with a like large open plenum situated below, and more or less matching features from what came before. Sorry for the sloppiness and thanks for your informed input!
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...also and just in passing, a question for you. Period race reports from Laguna Seca relate almost casually that Bud Moore Engineering showed up with the Cross Boss and Autolite inline carburetors, but that such were disallowed. O.K., we all kind of know that, but what I'd be curious about is did they actually attempt to roll through tech with them in place, was it a conversation with SCCA Technical Inspector John Timanus whereby the setup(s) quietly rested in boxes on the equipment transport, etc., or just what? The David Friedman photo collection accessible via the Benson Ford Research Center, while huge and valued, doesn't have a single image of the inline setup in place on a car, so I'm thinking some editorial license was used by those scribes doing their duty in-period. Surely more would have been said or known at this point I do think...
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Just a throwaway observation this. I does happen for increased knowledge that parts, assemblies, entire chassis, etc. that proved resistant to ready development in-period do in time see their fullest potential for studied application by those who have them now. Look at any classic or vintage F1 grid and one will witness what were no-hoper combinations from the past well-polished, thoroughly sorted out, reliable, and unquestionably fast too.
Oh - and do you think the Holley 'Name That Carburetor Contest' was fixed? A total scandal then, while to those looking on - you read it here FIRST (ha!).
Mike K./Swede70