Thread: Building a Time Bomb...
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10-15-2006 09:23 PM #1
Building a Time Bomb...
I picked up a running 305 and been using it as a mock up engine in my 47 Dodge Pickup. I'm currently building a 350 for the Dodge which is being topped off with a Weind 144 Blower. The Dodge (Fingers Crossed) will be road worthy in the spring and shortly after the 350 will be done.
Crazy/Dumb Idea...
How long do you think the 305 would last with the blower? I'm thinking as long as I dont beat on it too hard I can get the summer out of it.
Thoughts? Worth the price of gaskets to find out?
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10-15-2006 09:59 PM #2
Originally Posted by joe_and_jeep"aerodynamics are for people who cant build engines"
Enzo Ferrari
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10-15-2006 10:25 PM #3
305's have light heads that crack. Other than that, they're like any other SBC. Same crank as a 350, should stand your setup okay, depending on how good a "runner" it is.
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10-16-2006 08:20 AM #4
I don't know.
I guess the worst thing that could happen is a catastrophic event resulting in you being mamed or killed. I think you are asking for trouble. Personally trouble finds me way too easy for me to go looking for it. Paranoid? Maybe a little .........
Just a thought ............
KitzJon Kitzmiller, MSME, PhD EE, 32 Ford Hiboy Roadster, Cornhusker frame, Heidts IFS/IRS, 3.50 Posi, Lone Star body, Lone Star/Kitz internal frame, ZZ502/550, TH400
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10-16-2006 10:20 AM #5
Originally Posted by R Pope
,double humps crack Your in no immediate danger.If you are new to blown engines ,this might be a good thing to learn fuel ratios on,rather than your exspensive motor.Its gunna take longer than u thought and its gunna cost more too(plan ahead!)
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10-16-2006 04:55 PM #6
guy i know built his own double turbo syst out of 2 6.5 turbos on a stock 350.He told me the best thing he bouhght was a fuel ratio meter which he has mounted in his cab. he advised it took all the guess work out of jetting it.
he was running 12.5 s in the quarter in a 1/2 ton and its a stock engine.
i would suspect that it wold help anyone who is messing with jetting especially under pressure.
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10-16-2006 05:14 PM #7
well, dosn't a 305 have 9.5:1 comp? if so, only 4 PSI is safe on a good running engine, the least that a 144 will put out is 5-7, and because the 305 heads are low flowing, might be more like 7.You don't know what you've got til it's gone
Matt's 1951 Chevy Fleetline- Driver
1967 Ford Falcon- Sold
1930's styled hand built ratrod project
1974 Volkswagen Super Beetle Wolfsburg Edition- sold
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10-17-2006 07:59 AM #8
Wont be my first blown motor. My 68 is the same thing with a 350/144 Blower. I got a few sets of 350 heads in the garage, I know I have one set of 1.94, but I dont remember the casting. Thinking 881 or 883. They were rebuilt not long ago. Worst comes to worst I destroy a 305.
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10-17-2006 08:21 AM #9
A blown 305 would be a great way to use up some of those smog low comp 350 heads we all have lying about. And as you say, if it scatters, what's one 305 more or less? You'd be doing the world a favor, and have a ball doing it! (Just pray none of the schrapnel comes up and wipes out the blower!)
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10-17-2006 10:10 AM #10
C-mon now ease up on the 305,they will beat alot of over cammed and over intaked 350s.The 305 if fine for what it is,after all if were lookin for track power the 350 aint that big a step up.!!Unless thats a magical 45 cubesIts gunna take longer than u thought and its gunna cost more too(plan ahead!)
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10-17-2006 10:31 AM #11
Originally Posted by joe_and_jeep"aerodynamics are for people who cant build engines"
Enzo Ferrari
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