Engine Swap 383 for 440

Jon Robinson

New Member
Local time
10:28 AM
Joined
Nov 21, 2021
Messages
4
Reaction score
2
Location
North Carolina
I have a numbers matching 69 Bee that came with a 383 HP engine. Yesterday I picked up a date coded 440 Six barrel from a 69 GTX. I'm considering swapping that for the 383 (definately keeping the 383). Any thoughts on what it does to the value of the car?
 

33 IMP

Well-Known Member
Local time
7:28 AM
Joined
Dec 21, 2017
Messages
9,161
Reaction score
13,329
Location
taxifornia,soon 2b Arizona.
It helps, IF you include the #'s 383 with the sale, and state as such.

Oh, by the way, there is NO such thing as a date coded 440 sixpack/six bbl in a 69 GTX.

If you try to dress it up as a A12 bee, it will HURT the value.
 

Davefinan

Well-Known Member
Local time
9:28 AM
Joined
Mar 20, 2021
Messages
167
Reaction score
129
Location
Portland Tennessee
It helps, IF you include the #'s 383 with the sale, and state as such.

Oh, by the way, there is NO such thing as a date coded 440 sixpack/six bbl in a 69 GTX.

If you try to dress it up as a A12 bee, it will HURT the value.
Agreed. When you sell you can always offer the original 383 engine with the car.
 

#41

Well-Known Member
Local time
7:28 AM
Joined
Oct 18, 2012
Messages
1,046
Reaction score
1,954
Location
WA
I don't know... people who buy cars like to imagine that their numbers matching car is un-touched.

When you are done having fun, put the 383 back in it to sell and hawk the 440 separately.
 

Runcharger

Well-Known Member
Local time
7:28 AM
Joined
Apr 22, 2020
Messages
1,219
Reaction score
2,256
Location
Vernon
440 in a 383 is a bit of a turnoff for me. If you keep the 383 to keep with the car though I don't think there's any impact on value.
 

Jon Robinson

New Member
Local time
10:28 AM
Joined
Nov 21, 2021
Messages
4
Reaction score
2
Location
North Carolina
It helps, IF you include the #'s 383 with the sale, and state as such.

Oh, by the way, there is NO such thing as a date coded 440 sixpack/six bbl in a 69 GTX.

If you try to dress it up as a A12 bee, it will HURT the value.

When I sell it, the 383 will definitely go with it.

So I was give bad information on the GTX? The 440 is date coded from late 68.

Even as an A12 tribute (specifying that it IS a tribute and not a real A12)?

Just trying to decide if I go with my original plan of putting the 383 in the car and holding the 440 for a future project or putting it in the car and making it an A12 tribute. Not trying to fool anyone.
 

Jon Robinson

New Member
Local time
10:28 AM
Joined
Nov 21, 2021
Messages
4
Reaction score
2
Location
North Carolina
When I sell it, the 383 will definitely go with it.

So I was give bad information on the GTX? The 440 is date coded from late 68.

Even as an A12 tribute (specifying that it IS a tribute and not a real A12)?

Just trying to decide if I go with my original plan of putting the 383 in the car and holding the 440 for a future project or putting it in the car and making it an A12 tribute. Not trying to fool anyone.
Correction, the engine is date coded from late 1969, not 1968
 

33 IMP

Well-Known Member
Local time
7:28 AM
Joined
Dec 21, 2017
Messages
9,161
Reaction score
13,329
Location
taxifornia,soon 2b Arizona.
A late 69 block, if late enough, could be from a 70 GTX with a sixpack. The only 440 sixpack in a 69 were the A12 runner and bee.
The parts necessary to make a decent "tribute" are remarkably expensive, and you surely would not get your investment back.
A half-assed clone that can be spotted as such from across the parking lot won't bring any more money (at least not from me) than a nice numbers-matching 383 car.
There is a thread here with pics from a show in Australia or New Zealand that shows three A12s. Two are clones and I can tell from seven thousand miles away.
 
Top