327 Small Block Chevy Dyno Test - VortecPro

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  • čas přidán 20. 08. 2024
  • 336" 10:1 Small Block Chevy

Komentáře • 106

  • @704406bbl
    @704406bbl Před 5 lety +7

    Good to see a 327/300 again. Had one in my 65 impala back in’77 and then another in a V8 Vega in the early 80’s. Sweet engines.

  • @MrJeffcoley1
    @MrJeffcoley1 Před 4 lety +11

    The auto generated subtitles call the roar of the engine “music.”
    Truth.

  • @DBSSTEELER
    @DBSSTEELER Před 3 lety +7

    Vortec heads and a roller cam would have been a much better combination. Would have made 400 hp and had no worries about needing ZDDP Additive with every oil change.

    • @marccres6619
      @marccres6619 Před 2 lety

      Had a vortec head the 461 flow better ,and if you have a x head hold on to your seat. But for just cutting the seats and minor porting. I would say this is great.

    • @matthewgraham2129
      @matthewgraham2129 Před rokem +1

      @@marccres6619 you are very wrong my friend

    • @olderthanyoucali8512
      @olderthanyoucali8512 Před rokem

      @DBSSTEELER- And what's the name of your engine building shop? And which of your engine building/dyno videos should we watch?

    • @shootermcgavin2819
      @shootermcgavin2819 Před rokem +2

      ​@@marccres6619Wrong.
      There is plenty of CZcams videos proving that the Vortec heads that you pull off a 1996 GM pickup OUT FLOW the Camel Hump heads you paid a rip off $800-$1500 a set for, as badass as Fuelies were, by 25-40 cfm depending on the individuals tested. Google has that proof also. Yes Vortecs crack easy, yes you have to run vortec style rocker arms, yes you have to machine the valve seal stumps down to run over .450" lift cam, yes you have to run ugly centerbolt valve covers, yes you have to run a vortec style intake bolt pattern, but they still beat the double humps to shreds

    • @shootermcgavin2819
      @shootermcgavin2819 Před rokem +1

      ​@@olderthanyoucali8512yet that person still said a true statement about Vortec heads proof or not..

  • @jackthompson1382
    @jackthompson1382 Před 5 lety +8

    I saw this video and said “...oooooh $hit dog!!!” Drove my 11:1 333” sbc in my 68 camaro to work today 😎

  • @BuzzLOLOL
    @BuzzLOLOL Před 5 lety +20

    A picture of the full dyno RPM chart or graph curve would be informative... peak numbers are to sell magazines...

  • @scottsigmon926
    @scottsigmon926 Před 5 lety +11

    Great video Mark. This is as basic of a build as it gets here. Very low end parts but goes to show the audience what great machine work does to a 327/300. Carb, headers and basic hyd flat tappet, small cam.

  • @zxtenn
    @zxtenn Před 5 lety +3

    Same as the OLD SCHOOL 327 365 engine with solid cam and 202 heads, etc.. I am sure he will be happy with that little 336

    • @BuzzLOLOL
      @BuzzLOLOL Před 5 lety +2

      It's still old school... but fine...

  • @wheelstandr
    @wheelstandr Před 5 lety +3

    Good job Mark. Can’t wait to get back into finishing your Big Block.

  • @psbnighthawk6676
    @psbnighthawk6676 Před 5 lety +3

    Nice little engine. I'm building a SJ 327 for a '51 Henry J street rod. Using flat-top pistons, Dart 65cc heads with 180 runners, a Howards 110951-10 cam (duration is 221 @ 50 intake and 231 @ 50 exhaust with .470 lift using 1.5 rockers and 110 LSA). Currently planning on a dual plane air gap intake. Hope to pull similar numbers.

  • @hotrodswoodshed7405
    @hotrodswoodshed7405 Před 5 lety +4

    Very interesting for 327 build! That's what I've been running for years, very similar. Only running the original Z28 duntov camshaft. With the 11 to 1 .120 Dome Pistons. Definitely a real powerhouse! Especially for a stock performance setup. I've always wondered what real Dyno numbers would come out of that set up.

  • @zxtenn
    @zxtenn Před 5 lety +3

    Nice strong and driveable 13 second engine with some good traction, no need for 650 HP in a Corvette

  • @christophersnyder3241
    @christophersnyder3241 Před 5 lety +6

    thats a respectable engine there. my favorite chevy engine. and im i ford guy.

  • @joecucch8261
    @joecucch8261 Před 5 lety +4

    I had a 327/ 365 back in the 70s that was bored .060 over and the heads were ported and polished. The pistons were 11 to 1 TRW castings In my 69 Camaro . It ran pretty even with the high performance 396s of the day. 350 C I motors with this type set up turned low 12 second quarter mile passes. That's what I ran in my 65 Nova.

  • @mgbchuck6527
    @mgbchuck6527 Před 5 lety +2

    What a sweet sbc, I have a little sbc in my MGB (exbracket race engine), 358ci. small journal ('67) block, billet main caps, aluminum rods, 12 to 1 comp., .600" lift solid roller cam, fully ported 492 angle plug heads and port matched Holley strip dominator intake, Holley 750 HP DP--pretty sporty. I had a similar L-79 clone type sbc as yours in a '65 Chevelle daily driver, 1 of my favorite cars ever.

  • @larrybennett2342
    @larrybennett2342 Před 5 lety +3

    Good Video, Nice little Mouse. 👍 👍! CHEVY 💪! 🏁

  • @roelbarroso5421
    @roelbarroso5421 Před 4 lety +1

    I built a mean ass little 327 I know it's got over 425 horses. To make a long story short I put racing pistons vortec heads with a whole bunch of money in them from a machine shop a big ass Cam a big carburetor And a big stall converter. I call it my pissed off 327 .

  • @justinferrall9601
    @justinferrall9601 Před 5 lety

    Mark you do excellent work. I’m on the chevelles forum so I get to see a lot of your work.

  • @mikef-gi2dg
    @mikef-gi2dg Před 4 lety +1

    I would like to see a test with factory vortec heads, they are easy to come by. My first v8 was a 68 327 250 hp, in my 68 Impala, with a glide, and 308 gear. That thing would light the tires, and cruise the highway with ease. I still got the car. Love the 327 sound. Hey...maybe you could build it for me!

    • @roelbarroso5421
      @roelbarroso5421 Před 4 lety +1

      I can't remember exactly what year was 1999 maybe was 98 but super Chevy magazine did an article about building a small block Chevy With vortec heads making about 425 horsepower. They used A350 stock bottom end . I had A327 so I bought my pistons board it at 30 over 9 to 1 flat top Forge pistons. I had everything balanced and blue printed they used a Cam with 488 lift i used 1 was 510 lift. I bought vortec heads put Chrome Molly push rods and all that good stuff, then I had the heads took to a machine shop they put screw in studs guide plates they shaved and decked the heads I forgot how much. polished shaved some stuffed in their put some very expensive Springs and. 1.7 roller tops edlbrock rpm intake headrrs flow master exhaust.they used a Turbo 350 with a 2500 stall converter from B&m i used a 3500 TCI 10 and stall converter 750 edlbrock carb.
      3 stage shit kit. That motor and car has been in my garage for about 20 years. I only put about a 500 miles a year on it. most of them are just little joy rides but that thing will scream and run like a raped ape shifting at 6500 rpm all day long I think if I change the rear gears That thing would come unglued . My daughter will be taken it soon its been hers since the year 2000 ive owned it since 93. she says I can keep the motor it's to angry for her she plans to put a stock big block in it something a little more street friendly for her.

    • @roelbarroso5421
      @roelbarroso5421 Před 4 lety

      MSD ignition
      edlbrock gear drives. I'm thinking its making about 450 horses.

    • @mikef-gi2dg
      @mikef-gi2dg Před 4 lety

      @@roelbarroso5421 that sounds like fun no matter which way you go! I like 327's my first v8 was a 327 in my 68 impala, still got the car, motor, trans, plus a whole lot more.
      My 327 was a screamer with the tiny valve heads factory q-jet, stock cam ect. Going to build a similar, hot 327 when the dust clears, and put it in my 75 Monza.

    • @gordocarbo
      @gordocarbo Před 2 měsíci

      @@roelbarroso5421 Watch the vid? Made 364 and similar torque

  • @joshcardwell1189
    @joshcardwell1189 Před 2 lety

    Hello Mark, I enjoy watching your videos, and also admire your attention to detail in your machine work and spotless shop/dyno room/ and engine builds. I especially liked watching your chevelle pull the front tires off the ground. I have a 67 chevelle with a 327 in it, and would like to build it similar to what you did for your son's pickup. Happy New Year to you

  • @firebirdjone
    @firebirdjone Před 5 lety +4

    The Isky cam specs sound very close to the L-79 151 cam with 222@ .050 and .447 lift, with the Isky cam having a much tighter LSA. Nicely done. Good power from stockish parts. I assume that's an open spacer? I've never found the 4 hole version to work very well on the dual plane intakes.

  • @johnparrish9215
    @johnparrish9215 Před 5 lety +6

    Oh Ya, that in a 63 Chevy 2 would be great!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @AB-80X
    @AB-80X Před 5 lety +2

    Interesting. Did not know anybody sill used such small cubes.

    • @cuzz63
      @cuzz63 Před 4 lety +2

      5.3 liters are very common.

  • @Anarchy-Is-Liberty
    @Anarchy-Is-Liberty Před 2 lety +2

    I gotta admit, I was hoping to hear about 400+hp!!

    • @nova68cutie
      @nova68cutie Před 2 lety

      @ Anarchy is freedom. I as well was hoping 4 similar results.

  • @dufus2273
    @dufus2273 Před 5 lety +2

    nice job. runs nice. my 398 sbf puts out 1.22hp/ci and I was disappointed. wanted 500. should've went with the 408ci. was watching cost. already had 3.85 crank,rods, srp pistons. oh well.

    • @BuzzLOLOL
      @BuzzLOLOL Před 5 lety +2

      A particular cam and heads makes about the same HP no matter the cubes under them... but torque varies with cubes...

  • @kencohagen4967
    @kencohagen4967 Před 5 lety +2

    So, back in 68-9 and slightly beyond there was a lot of discussion what was better, a 327 or 350. I've always been a 327 fan based on Rod ratio and with the large journal crank, it's ability to rev slightly higher, getting more out a combination.
    And wallah! 1.08 hp per cubic inch. Now swap everything into a 350 and find out just how hard it it to get just 1 hp per cubic inch is!

    • @hankclingingsmith8707
      @hankclingingsmith8707 Před 5 lety +2

      350 was built for torque,and TRUCKS originally..

    • @BuzzLOLOL
      @BuzzLOLOL Před 5 lety +4

      @@hankclingingsmith8707- 350 first available in 1967 Camaro only...

    • @BuzzLOLOL
      @BuzzLOLOL Před 5 lety +2

      A particular pair of heads and cam makes about the same HP no matter the cubes underneath them... but torque increases with cubes...

    • @kencohagen4967
      @kencohagen4967 Před 5 lety +1

      BuzzLOLOL oh how the racing world wishes that were true. You leaving out huge variables like bore to stroke ratio and rod length to stroke ration. Those two parameters prove that statement wrong all by themselves. Now, I don't say this with any Air of superiority, or from coming from one camp to another as far as specs go, but it's true. It had been measured time and time again, and the variable that goes unaccounted for in your statement is that of the operating RPM. Horsepower is a mathematical product of torque X Rpm divided by 5252. The higher you wind a motor with all else being equal the more HP it will make. Likewise, the longer the connecting to with respect to the stroke of the crankshaft, the flatter the torque curve will be allowing a 327 with 6" rods to overtake a 350 with 6" rods all day long. I understand what you are saying about the limits of CFM available to the engine, but with everything else being the same, same carburetor etc, the higher the ore length to stroke ration will always produce more horsepower. And that's what they found out in and around 1969. Mopar already had that firgured outs and used it to their advantage over and over again. Theses days we see the use of shorter connecting rods only because at some point displacement takes over and with the improvements is metallurgy that have come about in the past couple decades it's possible to run a rod length to stroke ratio of 1.5 to 1 without breaking crankshafts like what we saw in the 60's and 70's, maybe into the 80's. (The 80's are a hard thing to judge because GM was more interested in the bottom line than reliability, and to some extent the other manufacturers followed suit. But not to the same extremes as Chevrolet.) That said, and one of my very best friend's use of 454 blocks as anchors to stead his peers at his Marina, which was common practice when one couldn't find viable crankshafts for those who wanted to build 454's. Hell, even the SBC Chevy 400 cranks letters the grounds of machine shops during the early days of using factory cranks to build their 383's. At least those cranks were cheap, but the forged 454 cranks ran about $500 plus a $600 core charge if you didn't have one to turn in. A pricey option back in the day!anyway. Theoretically your are correct, burin the real world at the time of my comment, it didn't hold water, hence the vast and numerous discussions on which mill was better the Big Mac, or its older brother, the Quarter Pounder!

    • @jasonconklin8172
      @jasonconklin8172 Před 5 lety +2

      Vortex heads and 327 stroke plus way better on mpg if it matters in 327

  • @andrewk7731
    @andrewk7731 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the video I had a friend that had a hj sedan I'm from Australia it had a staunch lil 327 in it built by Mark winters in the 80's about 11to 1 double humps with nothing left in them they were skinny (the chap that bought this engine from my friend supercharged it and blew the wall out of a port ) it was balanced really well
    I ended up in a heated argument with a friend that was a pretty good chap normally although he had a streak of uncertainty about him I stated that the lil Chevy would have had close to 400 at the wheels the hj had a top loader and nine inch in it so say 20 loss from flywheel hp
    Well my friend flipped right out started accusing me of major bs and said I was romancing my youth and then called me a fkn idiot I said get in your car c___head and don't ever come back
    That lil Chevy had a solid flat tappet cam can't remember the specs and revved to 7k plus
    It run as smooth as silk back then it was about $8.5 k dressed to build it that was a house deposit it had a Victor junior and a 650 double pumper holley on it jetted up a lil sorry bout the scattered specs but I'm remembering as I go that lil engine moove that biggish car so well I drove it at 240k one day and had a lil rd left and stomped on it and it had more I had to back off
    Too see this vid with an iron headed 327 with those numbers gives me solice but I won't get my friendship back shame
    Long live the mouse Thank you
    Ps it was so much fun to drive that car had a linear power delivery not too much anywhere but enough

  • @Closeoutracer
    @Closeoutracer Před 5 lety +3

    Valve size increase on this small a CID ranks low in HP per dollar. CFM/Flow dif in 1.94 vs 2.02 is often barely measurable. Use valve money for head or intake porting, trick windage tray, trick carb. HP ahead for same money.

    • @txstang84
      @txstang84 Před 5 lety +2

      Under most circumstances I would totally agree, but if the valves need to be replaced due to wear, no harm in replacing them with a larger diameter...especially in a SBC where the 202s are probably the same price, and the valve gets a nice fresh seat without being sunk into the head.

    • @Closeoutracer
      @Closeoutracer Před 5 lety +2

      @@txstang84 1.94 to 2.02 is a 4% increase in valve size... At what cost? At what increase in CFM? If any? Budget goes to what helps the most .. always. Vortec Pro has some great info .. "2.02 upgrade" is a 70's, 80's machinist money maker.. Not a Flowbench owners suggestion typically.

    • @txstang84
      @txstang84 Před 5 lety

      Closeoutracer no argument there, which is why I phrased my reply the way I did...read it a different way
      IF you need to replace valves due to stem wear, cracks, runout-whatever-why not upsize? The valves are all too often the SAME price, and when the machinist opens up the seat to accommodate the new bigger valve, the seat isn’t sunk into the head which hurts flow, especially at low lifts in most legacy heads.
      Ultimately speaking, it would probably be cheaper in the long run to use the vortec heads and appropriate intake as they’d very likely beat out the old camel hump castings in every way.

    • @Closeoutracer
      @Closeoutracer Před 5 lety +1

      @@txstang84 Fair enough

  • @michaelisola6328
    @michaelisola6328 Před 5 lety +1

    Great video Mark , thanks for sharing !

  • @bennapier9260
    @bennapier9260 Před 5 lety +2

    Not bad at all for such a mild combination

  • @davescbradiorepair8195
    @davescbradiorepair8195 Před 5 lety +2

    I do have a 327 out of a vette that im building sooon but right now I'm enjoying the power that the Ford Cleveland makes the 70 4v with closed chamber heads makes 380 lb of torque with the stock cam but they are getting very hard to find and parts are getting very expensive. Great video I'll be watching more.

    • @rickeydriskill1096
      @rickeydriskill1096 Před 5 lety +1

      Cleveland stuff is for sure hard to come by. So is the 351w stuff now as well. I try to get hands on all of it that I can.

    • @davescbradiorepair8195
      @davescbradiorepair8195 Před 5 lety +1

      @@rickeydriskill1096 I don't blame you if I still had all of the Cleveland stuff now that I had back in the 80s I would definitely have a gold mine.

    • @BuzzLOLOL
      @BuzzLOLOL Před 5 lety

      Are you intending both engines for the same vehicle?

  • @TheMrmmkkpro
    @TheMrmmkkpro Před 3 lety

    Sweet, old school, nice. 👍👍🏁🏁

  • @mikehunt2190
    @mikehunt2190 Před 4 lety +1

    Get rid of the factory heads and put some AFR 195cc heads and a solid roller cam and watch that 327 make 450 horses and 415 plus lb. ft of torque.
    I bored my 327 to 4.062 and used a forged piston, but many people don't realize how wicked these 327s can be.

    • @mikehunt2190
      @mikehunt2190 Před 3 lety +1

      @D Mass not at all too big at all for my application. We had it set up to run make peak power in the 3500-6800 rpm range. The heads and cam were chosen with the stall converter and rear gear ratio we were running. Low end torque wont be great, but thats not what i was aiming for with a 327.

    • @mikehunt2190
      @mikehunt2190 Před 3 lety +1

      @D Mass sounds fun. I remember back in the day guys used to run a 377 (when they would find a 400 crank and put it in a 350 block) on the tracks. They ran good.

  • @racerd3801
    @racerd3801 Před 5 lety +1

    In the Feb 2008 issue of popular Hotrodding magazine, the Engine Masters challenge there was a 327 that I guy had that made 450Lb Ft TQ @4200 and 470HP at 6500. It also had a #461 head on it, I just wonder what these guys did to make that kind of power???

    • @peterviceroy1592
      @peterviceroy1592 Před 5 lety

      Racer D I’ll tell you what they did. They loosened the pistons up in the cylinders by honing to increase the piston to wall Clarence.

    • @V8rings
      @V8rings Před 3 lety

      I was there personally at the Engine Master's with a 305. They were Porting Dynamics that had that 327. They ported the 🐫 humps very well to get that kind of power because that's there business.

  • @shitbox7413
    @shitbox7413 Před 5 lety +2

    Impressive 👍🏻

  • @timrayburn2461
    @timrayburn2461 Před 5 lety +2

    Great video,thanks for posting.What was the carb jetting,is the spacer open or 4 hole ?

  • @Levisnteeshirt1
    @Levisnteeshirt1 Před 5 lety

    It did ok , a hyd roller would have made a big torque dividend , without some chamber mods those heads are just not that great , I would want a 327 to wind to 7000 myself , this one probably will but it's already made the numbers it's going to , so he didn't push it that high ,, the z28 type springs will do that easily , it did good , it's probably in the 91-93 octane bracket anyway so I would've bumped the compression on up to close to 11-1

  • @mikejohns3104
    @mikejohns3104 Před 5 lety +3

    Please tell me about that big shiny bolt in the middle of the front of the balancer. Never saw one of those on a 327 before.

    • @jameshorner242
      @jameshorner242 Před 3 lety +1

      Most likely, the snout of the crank was drilled and tapped to accept the balancer bolt.

  • @frfrpr
    @frfrpr Před 5 lety +1

    that's pretty stout if you ask me. thanks for info and video

  • @haydenspence6952
    @haydenspence6952 Před 5 lety +1

    Love your videos.real engine builders not jist assembing stuff out of a box.good work and thanks for sharing the specs and knowledge in general excellent for a v8 man like myself.any advice in regards to cam for the l98 ls motor?mostly street driven.I have a 2nd hand isky with 224@50 int&exh.it has 609 lift with 112 lsa.I thought this would be a good cam as my car is manual tr6060 3:45 diff gears. Cheers mate

    • @BuzzLOLOL
      @BuzzLOLOL Před 5 lety

      Is that an L98 or an LSx engine? TPI, carb.?

  • @zxtenn
    @zxtenn Před 3 lety

    Enough power to push around a 1st generation Camaro or Nova and be streetable, have some fun and run in the 13's
    Mark, do you remember the old GM SB 'angle plug heads'? Supposed to be better for bigger pistons like 11.5 + back in the day, just wonder if they actually worked ir just marketing?

  • @josevazquez8201
    @josevazquez8201 Před 5 lety +3

    327 can safely rev to 7000 you should try it! From the factory

    • @BuzzLOLOL
      @BuzzLOLOL Před 5 lety

      They wanted more power at lower RPMS for better MPG and drivability... engine life...

    • @michaelphelps5064
      @michaelphelps5064 Před 5 lety +1

      The cam is not made to work in that RPM range I would suspect it would make less HP and TQ reving it that high with that cam. Plus you may kiss a piston with Z28 springs. That woiuld suck.

    • @BuzzLOLOL
      @BuzzLOLOL Před 5 lety

      @@michaelphelps5064 - The stock 365 HP/375 HP 327" cams ARE huge cams and do work to 7000 - 7500 RPMs... but shimming the valve springs may be needed... the stock heads flow are the main detriment to HP above 6,000 RPMs...

  • @hankclingingsmith8707
    @hankclingingsmith8707 Před 5 lety +1

    Nice motor

  • @niper99
    @niper99 Před 5 lety +1

    great videos... got a question in regards to cam lobe separation.... im building up a 350 but i want the ""lumpiest"" idle sound i can get.. the exhaust will is gonna be really load... lm even willing to sacrfice some power to have that sound... so what lobe separation deg should/could i use? 102-105 or do i need higher thanks?

  • @dirtywrench
    @dirtywrench Před 4 lety +1

    Can someone plz tell me what that little alternator look alike is hanging off the front???

    • @jimmy_olds
      @jimmy_olds Před 4 lety +2

      It’s an electric motor driving the water pump

  • @demarques1911
    @demarques1911 Před 5 lety +1

    But didnt GM make factory 327s that had 375hp?

    • @BuzzLOLOL
      @BuzzLOLOL Před 5 lety +2

      Yes, with 11:1, 254/254 durations at .050" lift solid lifters cam, F.I., and stock heads... a more radical engine...

    • @demarques1911
      @demarques1911 Před 5 lety

      @@BuzzLOLOL with those kinda parts.. i expect to see 500hp

    • @demarques1911
      @demarques1911 Před 5 lety

      Well... i take that back.. u said stock heads... maybe 400

    • @BuzzLOLOL
      @BuzzLOLOL Před 5 lety +1

      @@demarques1911 - I was just giving the spec.s of the stock 1965 375 HP 327" engine... the spec'd .030"/.030" valve clearance cost some valve lift(more HP, less drivability available by tightening up the valve lash)... 365 HP was same engine except carb.d and no F.I./F.I. intake manifold... Stock heads having about 157- 165cc intake ports and poorly cast runners/ports... misshapen bowls... large valve guide bosses... The F. I. intake manifold was similar to a high rise dual quad carb.'d tunnel ram intake... Easily worth 10 more HP...
      The engine dyno'd here has ported stock heads, 10:1, mild hydraulic cam...

  • @gordocarbo
    @gordocarbo Před 2 měsíci

    More the keyboard builders post the more it is obvious they dont know jack.
    THis is a great street combo good torque curve can drive every day!
    Makes more torque than the GM 350hp cam too.
    Dont think anyone here is gonna teach mark anything haha

  • @rickhughett6713
    @rickhughett6713 Před 2 lety

    I have a 1966 Impala 327 275hp car with a 4sp. Can you build my motor to these specs? Price range please complete running eng dynoed.

  • @jonbaker3728
    @jonbaker3728 Před 4 lety

    Did you turn the alternator into a motor to drive the water pump?

  • @user-zu2ed6ye5w
    @user-zu2ed6ye5w Před 7 měsíci

    Headers look too big for good torque ?

  • @ragincajun2605
    @ragincajun2605 Před 3 lety

    Don't sound so excited there fella

  • @tobiaswillson5900
    @tobiaswillson5900 Před 5 lety

    bravo

  • @icutwood2473
    @icutwood2473 Před 4 lety

    Did you put harden seats in it?

  • @dirtywrench
    @dirtywrench Před 4 lety

    What octane fuel you running?

  • @johnnijssen8590
    @johnnijssen8590 Před 3 lety

    Here is a small journal block with the same heads on it. However, I turned a 383 crank down to fit. These heads did remarkably well. czcams.com/video/Hu79WwV6wLE/video.html

  • @CharlieBrown-pb9xn
    @CharlieBrown-pb9xn Před 5 lety

    Why such a little cam?

  • @fredlohmann1448
    @fredlohmann1448 Před 3 lety

    350

  • @peterviceroy1592
    @peterviceroy1592 Před 5 lety +1

    Build is too tight! Power is in the cylinder walls. Horse power results are too mediocre for all the time and money spent.

  • @brentonk461
    @brentonk461 Před 5 lety +1

    Cam's too small

    • @brentonk461
      @brentonk461 Před 5 lety

      @ well, you might want to check out the latest video.

    • @amc401nash6
      @amc401nash6 Před 5 lety

      The owner had the engine built for street use.

    • @brentonk461
      @brentonk461 Před 5 lety

      @@amc401nash6 I was going to elaborate on this but decided not too.
      I personally wouldn't use that grind cam for a daily driver, street use.

    • @amc401nash6
      @amc401nash6 Před 5 lety

      Agreed, I thought you may have been suggesting he should have used an all out competition cam for street use. I stand corrected.

    • @brentonk461
      @brentonk461 Před 5 lety

      @@amc401nash6 Not what I was meaning. But, it is possible too run a competition type camshaft for this application.