Thread: chevy v-8 in a fairlane
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06-25-2006 09:25 AM #1
I am still waitin to find the crown jewel of the chevy legend ,....the 50-60s vette in run down rusted out unrepairable condition and install a 460 ,slap the bondo on it,a quick paint job and out into the public I will go
Pull up the the local hotrod weekend run and let em say ohh that vette sounds gooood ,what ya got under the hood.Then open her up a let em feast there eyes on the fordmotorsport racing valve covers
and see if they tear up,then proceed to act like I am tryin to start it and it wont.Then hastily get outa the car and start kicking dents in the vette(hopefully not too much bondo will fall out and give me away) hollering I knew the chevy would ruin a perfectly good ford motor as I am kickin more dents in the vette
Its gunna take longer than u thought and its gunna cost more too(plan ahead!)
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06-25-2006 10:23 AM #2
THAts SO FUNNY!!!!!!
Originally Posted by shawnlee28
WE COULD DO THE SAME THING WITH THE FORD MUSTAND,,LOL
PUT A NICE 350 IN HER,,GO TO THE SHOW AND LET THEM SAY ,SOUNDS GOOD WHATS UNDER THE HOOD,,AND TO THERE SURPRIZE ITS A 350 LOL....
LET ME EXPRESS THIS WITH YOU..I HAVE HAD SOME GREAT FORDS AND SOME GREAT CHEVYS,,I THINK ITS ALLL IN HOW YOU TAKE THE TIME TO BUILD THEM,,,BUT MY ZZ4 BY FAR IS ONE OF THE BETTER 350 ENGINES EVER PRODUCED,,,,,,,,JUST A THOUGHT!!(quote*)::
NOTE:ZZ4 CRATE ENGINE SPECS
What if it had a steel roller camshaft, four bolt main block, undercut rolled fillet crankshaft, high silicon pistons and strong PM connecting rods? We imagined it, and then engineered, developed, tested and built it. The ZZ4 is the evolution of our popular ZZ series of small blocks that power thousands of street rods, hot street cars, circle track racers and drag racers. With over 400 ft.lbs. of torque, the ZZ4 is the best way to put an aluminum head, roller cam, high performance small block between your favorite fenders.
The aluminum angle plug cylinder heads have screw in rocker studs, 1.94" intake and 1.50" exhaust valves and 58cc combustion chambers that yield a crisp and responsive 10 to 1 compression ratio. Also included are our lightweight valve spring retainers that weigh half as much as our previous design. The valve seats are radiused and we've included valve stem seals to help keep the oil where it belongs.
To compliment the cylinder head design, we've incorporated a steel roller tappet camshaft with .474" intake and .510" exhaust valve lift. The combination makes 355 horsepower at 5250 rpm and has that great sounding muscle car idle, with just enough lope to let people know that this is no station wagon engine.
Also included with the ZZ4 is an HEI distributor with an ignition timing advance curve developed for performance, a dual plane aluminum intake manifold that accepts your spread bore or square bore carburetor, an 8" high-RPM torsional damper, 12.75" auto trans flex plate and cast iron water pump.Donny Wagers
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06-25-2006 02:41 PM #3
Ford versus Chevy, Chevy versus Ford...This will go on for many pages just like it has on many other forums with no end result until one of the moderators decides to close it....(YAWN).
I'm not even going to type in my response. I'll just copy and paste from my own website:
Let me begin this page with a rant.
I build hot rods, I do not restore old cars. I don't believe that only Ford parts should go into a Ford, or Chevy parts into a Chevy. Each auto maker has made some great cars and trucks and some not so great cars and trucks. In hot rodding we pick and choose what we want in a vehicle. We build our rides as unique as ourselves. If we choose to build a Ford body on a Chevy frame with a Chrysler engine, and we attach Cadillac tail lights and Studebaker headlights, then so be it. This is our artwork, and to fit all these parts together in an eye appealing manner takes imagination and skill. During the 1950s, Detroit leaned toward the hot rodder for new ideas. These came out as innovations such as the Corvette, the Mustang, seat belts, dual headlights, recessed door handles, custom outside mirrors, glitzy hubcaps, custom steering wheels, widetrack wheels, lowered stance, and plush, cushy interiors. Today, American cars are assembled in foreign countries of plastic and tin and sold for big dollars. We hot rodders have chosen to go back to the American way with American cars and trucks built in Detroit, of good old American iron and steel from Pittsburg. We will build OUR vehicles OUR way, with OUR money, OUR sweat, OUR busted knuckles, using OUR ideas, to fullfill OUR needs, wants, and desires. We will continue to share OUR knowledge with each other, and as each new generation comes to us to learn, we will pass the torch in hopes that they will continue when we've parked OUR vehicles for the last time.
End of rant.52 Ford F-1, 327 Chevy, S-10 frame
My website:
www.geocities.com/lakota_circle_dancer/swap1
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06-25-2006 04:27 PM #4
I TOTALLY AGREE WE ARE ALL UNIQUE!::: the bottom line is all will run great ,if you no what your doing! THE END OF THE FIGHT! JUST LIKE OUR OPINIONS
Originally Posted by lakota
OPINIONS ARE LIKE BUTT HOLES WE ALL HAVE ONE ,,,,LOL
HAVE A NICE DAY SIR!Donny Wagers






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