Looking at the standard 2V manifold, I have some questions/ideas. Here's the top view:

And the bottom. It's my belief that the centre shape is a mock "Map of Australia".

Mating face (flange):

View towards head (Note angle of carb pad; manifold runners in horizontal plane):

After reading up more about pattern making and casting alloys, I came up with a few questions.
I assume that the mould is stood on edge , flange face down when pouring. Would this be likely? Note the bandsawed patch which would be on the "top" if this were the case. (See view towards head.)
As aluminium shrinks about 2%, do you make the main passages' core mould larger or smaller than desired finish size? Or is it in fact exact?
For the water jacket, following my surmise of the mould-on-edge, would the core for this be supported just in the hole now filled by the allen head plug? (See the flange view.) Or, would it be stabilised by one / both of the water pipe holes?
There are (from memory) three parts visible in the pattern (it's hard to see in the pics). Would this be due to a simple approach, using the one pattern to mould the cores and outside form? Or would there be some higher-tech reasoning in it?
Have I missed anything blindingly obvious?
Adam.
And the bottom. It's my belief that the centre shape is a mock "Map of Australia".
Mating face (flange):
View towards head (Note angle of carb pad; manifold runners in horizontal plane):
After reading up more about pattern making and casting alloys, I came up with a few questions.
I assume that the mould is stood on edge , flange face down when pouring. Would this be likely? Note the bandsawed patch which would be on the "top" if this were the case. (See view towards head.)
As aluminium shrinks about 2%, do you make the main passages' core mould larger or smaller than desired finish size? Or is it in fact exact?
For the water jacket, following my surmise of the mould-on-edge, would the core for this be supported just in the hole now filled by the allen head plug? (See the flange view.) Or, would it be stabilised by one / both of the water pipe holes?
There are (from memory) three parts visible in the pattern (it's hard to see in the pics). Would this be due to a simple approach, using the one pattern to mould the cores and outside form? Or would there be some higher-tech reasoning in it?
Have I missed anything blindingly obvious?

Adam.