We come up with all kinds of excuses to create our awesome machines, and Jamie Small’s reason for building this LS-swapped HQ Kingswood ute is a bloody ripper. “I had a spare set of Center Lines lying around and I wanted a car to put them on,” is his simple explanation. “I went through about three different HQ ute shells before I landed on this one, and we started from there.”
First published in the October 2022 issue of Street Machine
However, even that chosen fourth shell still needed a whole bunch of love to get it up to scratch. “I had Sean Hammond and the crew from South Melbourne Smash Repairs take on the bodywork, and we used everything from the Rare Spares catalogue,” Jamie says.
Everything up to and including the rear quarter panels were replaced, but because the bodywork was tackled during one of Melbourne’s many COVID-19 lockdowns, the boys were able to knock out all the work in around three months.
While the major body and paintwork were outsourced, rest assured that Jamie tackled the bulk of the HQ build himself. “We did all the assembly, tubbed it, did the engine conversion and even the wiring,” he says. “It was one of the more enjoyable builds I’ve done.”
That conversion was to an LS1, which was given a tickle by Chris Slattery. The original heads, block, crank and rods all remain, now accompanied by Wiseco forged pistons, LS7 lifters, head studs, a beefier Crow Cams stick with matching valve springs, and a Moroso oil pump. Air comes in via a Proflow 102mm throttlebody, and the LS belts out its gas through a set of Castlemaine Rod Shop pipes paired with a 2.5-inch exhaust. “I went with the LS because it was the best value for money for an engine swap, and it just works,” says Jamie.
Using a stocko LS1 ECU and thumping through the Turbo 400 gearbox and McDonald Brothers nine-inch rear, the LS makes a healthy 375rwhp on pump 98. “It goes well for a street car,” Jamie says. “It does everything I want it to do.”
It took Jamie and his mates around two years to transform the ute from a shell to a turn-key streeter, but towards the end of the build, he had extra motivation to get the big Quey done.
“A good mate of mine, Tony ‘Barney’ Peerman, had been battling cancer for a while, and towards the end he grabbed a tape measure and measured up the back of the ute. He said his coffin would fit, and that’s how he wanted to be taken out of this world,” Jamie explains. Luckily, the HQ just made that deadline after Barney’s passing. “We got it registered just a few days before the funeral, so he got his wish,” Jamie says.
Since then, the ute has been doing street miles every other weekend around Melbourne, which is exactly what Jamie built it for. “It’s just a nice, simple cruiser, and people enjoy seeing it around,” he says. “I think everyone can relate to these older utes, because everyone knows someone who had one back in the day, so to see one getting around these days is a cool thing.”
With a second-gen Camaro in the stable as more of a racer, Jamie says he doesn’t have any plans to take the HQ down the track, but we quietly suspect that could change if he follows through with some potential future plans for the Kingswood. “We built the engine to handle boost, and I do have a turbo sitting there that I might use for a rear-mounted system someday,” he says.
“But for now, I’m just going to enjoy it as it is. It’s nice to just have a car that works!”
Jamie Small
1973 HQ Holden Kingswood ute
Paint: | Keswick Green |
---|---|
ENGINE | |
Brand: | LS1 |
Induction: | Proflow 102mm throttlebody |
ECU: | LS1 |
Heads: | Standard LS1 |
Camshaft: | Crow Cams |
Conrods: | Standard |
Pistons: | Wiseco |
Crank: | Standard |
Oil pump: | Moroso |
Fuel system: | Bosch 044 pump |
Cooling: | Custom brass radiator |
Exhaust: | CRS headers, 2.5in system |
Ignition: | Standard LS |
TRANSMISSION | |
Gearbox: | Turbo 400 |
Converter: | Dominator, 2800rpm |
Diff: | 9in, 3.5:1 gears, 31-spline axles |
SUSPENSION & BRAKES | |
Front: | King Springs, Koni shocks |
Rear: | King Springs, Koni shocks |
Brakes: | Standard HQ |
WHEELS & TYRES | |
Rims: | Center Line; 15×5.5 (f), 15×10 (r) |
Rubber: | Ovation Ecovision VI-682 205/70R15 (f), Hoosier 29×12.5 R15 (r) |
THANKS
Phillip Bartolo and Phillip Galea at South Melbourne Smash Repairs; Ken Sandham; Chris Slattery.
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