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12-15-2015 02:01 PM #1
I am a huge early hemi fan, I have owned a 241 as well and sold it and I have only Chryslers now, the small Dodges suffered some minor issues but are still mighty for the cubic inches (not physical size thats for sure) The reason I sold my red ram was it cost just as much or more to build the Dodge as it does the Chrysler, and higher compression pistons make you head to custom mades and a bunch of bucks, the one thing with a hemi (any of em) is they are not cheap but on the same note you have something when you are done, spend 6k on a small block chevy and sell it and you get pennies on the dollar, find a 6k hemi build and you won't suffer near as bad on resale. Kicking out 300-350 hp is possible with a 241 but your spending some bucks. I had a custom manifold built by a great guy in Lawton Oklahoma named Jack Wagner, he also has built several blower manifolds for the Dodges and makes motor mounts for the baby hemis and resells them under another large company, Bob Walker (Hot Heads) could hook you up with his number as well. Dollar for dollar a single 4 bbl from hot heads will make the most power I believe, which they just started casting a few years ago, don't worry about finding a original as they are really rare and sell for about 1500 bucks as they where nascar obligation intakes.
Check out Webrodder.com — Dodge Red Ram Hemi - Part 1: Overview and Block Machining — Hot Rod Tech Articles & Forum for the best article on building a baby hemi I ever found. The index for this series is at http://webrodder.com/articles?search=dodge%20red%20ramLast edited by Matthyj; 12-15-2015 at 07:30 PM. Reason: Index Link added
Why is mine so big and yours so small, Chrysler FirePower
".......So sanded it all down and resprayed. ......" Been there. done that on a couple of paint jobs over the years. Usually took me a couple of days to get over being mad before I started...
Stude M5 build