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08-20-2006 04:13 PM #1
Making A Small Block 350 As Fast As It Can Be
I have Serious plans to rebuild my 350 and want it to be as fast as it can be but ive heard I should make it a stroker motor and it would be alot quicker but Im not exactly looking to make it quick but want it to be quick while having lots of horsepower I heard making it a stroker but putting in domed pistons would defeat the purpose What Should I Do?No body messes with the Night Rider
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08-20-2006 04:18 PM #2
Well, as fast as it can be is open to interpetation. In my neigborhood that means you are ready to spend about $20,000.00 on an engine. Domed pistons raise the compression and make it almost impossible to run the car on pump gas.... A stoker engine has a longer stroke and will produce more torque at a lower rpm.....Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, Live for Today!
Carroll Shelby
Learning must be difficult for those who already know it all!!!!
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08-20-2006 04:22 PM #3
yeah I know that but I want both without sacrificing too much of either I want it to be quick also fastNo body messes with the Night Rider
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08-20-2006 04:26 PM #4
Originally Posted by #1firebird
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08-20-2006 04:51 PM #5
Originally Posted by erik erikson
you mean using the crank from a 383 cause the bore is the sameNo body messes with the Night Rider
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08-20-2006 05:35 PM #6
Are you aware that there is no 383 to get a crank from? Chevy never made a 383. The 383 started with folks using a ground-down 400 crank in a 350 block. Pure hot-rodding initiative. Now, custom cranks are available, as are complete rotating assemblies.Jack
Gone to Texas
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08-20-2006 05:59 PM #7
Yep go the 383 way. And for a broad power band and good kick in the pants low end torque you need to install a 671 cam."aerodynamics are for people who cant build engines"
Enzo Ferrari
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08-20-2006 06:14 PM #8
Originally Posted by southerner
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08-20-2006 09:02 PM #9
Originally Posted by erik erikson
671 as in 671 blower. A performance cam moves more air through an engine. A 671 big cam gets the same and better results."aerodynamics are for people who cant build engines"
Enzo Ferrari
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08-21-2006 01:26 AM #10
Originally Posted by southernerIrish Diplomacy ..the ability to tell someone to go to Hell ,,So that they will look forward to to the trip
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08-21-2006 02:33 PM #11
Originally Posted by southerner
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08-21-2006 03:21 PM #12
Originally Posted by erik erikson
Just my sense of humour"aerodynamics are for people who cant build engines"
Enzo Ferrari
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08-21-2006 03:30 PM #13
Originally Posted by pat mccarthy
What size of rod? Also I might reuse the stock heads but plan to rework them would I be able to shave them down to a 64cc chamber or would I have to weld them up, Or do I want to? also plan to port and polish, new valves and springs, already have the roller rockersLast edited by #1firebird; 08-21-2006 at 03:33 PM.
No body messes with the Night Rider
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08-21-2006 03:32 PM #14
What is so much better about making it a stroker (aka 383) other then to just shave the heads get domed pistons ,port and polish? Would it just be Quicker?No body messes with the Night Rider
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08-21-2006 06:56 PM #15
See if you can find "Hot to Build Small Block Chevies for Power" by David Vizard. I may have the title wrong but Vizard has several good books with dyno curves in them which compare 350s to 383s at various rpm ranges. The 383 definitely has more low rpm torque and a 327 would favor high rpm HP and as you might expect the 350 is in between for torque. There are other considerations such as the need to run on increasingly poor gas and even thinking ahead to E85. You need to study the options more.
Don Shillady
Retired Scientist/teen rodderLast edited by Don Shillady; 08-22-2006 at 04:53 PM.
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Welcome to CHR. I think that you need to hook up your vacuum advance. At part throttle when cruising you have less air and fuel in each cylinder, and the air-fuel mixture is not as densely packed...
MSD 8360 distributor vacuum advance