Was the intake manifold painted in the blue metallic color to match the engine block when it left the factory?Thanks!
Yes.
I used to be indecisive. Now I'm not sure. I feel like I am diagonally parked in a parallel universe. 1968 400 convertible (Scarlet) 1976 T/A - 455 LE (No Burt) 1976 T/A New baby, starting full restoration. 1968 350 - 4 speed 'vert - 400 clone (the Beast!) 1968 350 convertible - Wife's car now- 400 clone (Aleutian Blue) (Blue Angel) 2008 Durango - DD 2008 GXP - New one from NH is AWESOME! 2017 Durango Citadel - Modern is nice! HEMI is amazing! 1998 Silverado Z71 - Father-daughter project 1968 400 coupe - R/A clone (Blue Pearl) (sold) 1967 326 convertible - Sold 1980 T/A SE Bandit - Sold
The only ones you see unpainted are the aluminum aftermarket...usually Edelbrocks. Indeed cast iron manifolds are correctly painted, and largely because factory cast iron NEEDS to be painted. If they are not, they will look like your cast iron exhasut manifolds in very short time...pure rust...
There was actually an unpainted Pontiac intake, that being the 1969-1970 RAIV. Not sure if perhaps that's what you were seeing in pics, but most likely you were probably seeing aftermarket intakes left bare aluminum.
I've always painted my aluminum intakes Pontiac Metallic Blue (or another Pontiac blue, depending on the year).
You may have an issue with the paint as it may flake off, aluminum is a soft metal and requires special paint to adhere too, we use to paint aluminum pipe and it would peel off in 6 months, I'd investagate it some more first, before spraying it with and engine enamel. Could be why they didn't paint them.
keydet86, you can just use regular Pontiac Metallic Blue engine paint on an aluminum manifold. I've been spraying intakes for 30+ years and never saw one peel the paint. Aluminum is a natural heat sink, so the paint won't flake off like it would on steel.
I painted a set of Edelbrock aluminum heads 15 years ago, and to this day the paint has never peeled, burned, or discolored, even over the center exhaust ports. They still look like new after all these years, which I've always been happy with!
As to why the factory did not paint RAIV intakes, that was purely a marketing thing. They wanted everyone to notice their new hi-perf aluminum RAIV intake, which was their first factory aluminum intake since the old 1963 SD421 days. Other manufacturers, like Chevrolet and Chrysler, began using aluminum intakes, and they left them natural aluminum too as it added to the "racer" image of their engines. Afterall, what good is having a hi-perf aluminum intake when no one knows it's there?
When Pontiac, like all the Detroit manufacturers, began to focus on emissions and economy in 1971, Pontiac painted their 1971-1972 455 H.O. intakes blue to lessen the "racer" aspect of their cars.
StealthBird, thanks again for the guidance/clarification on the intake manifold paint. Also, thanks for the historical insight on the RAIV and 455 H.O. intake manifolds. Pretty interesting!