Matthew
Touchdown! Greaser!
I sent him a couple of your pics:
"Ahh, variable lift push rods!"
"Ahh, variable lift push rods!"
I sent him a couple of your pics:
"Ahh, variable lift push rods!"
Good Lord...as I mentioned above, I expected the oil pump pickup to be installed incorrectly, but it's definitely done more creatively than I could have imagined.
You should check the dipstick length. It probably wasn't even touching the oil.
If your connecting rods have square head bolts and a piston oiler they are 289 HiPo, oval bolt heads are 69-70 Boss 302. Your photo shows oval heads, so thereya go.
If there isn't a four figure prefix followed by 6303 dash single letter suffix on the crank it's not a Ford part.
I recommend that you use an Edelbrock cam and lifters, they will suggest a hydraulic roller grind that complements your Edelbrock heads and suits your performance goals. You might have to change the springs. I doubt any effort was made to match your existing springs to the installed cam, and they might not be compatible with a hydraulic roller.
When you get a good deck height measurement, you can determine piston pin location, and decide what the piston installed height will be...usually equal to deck height, then the head gasket selection will allow .038-.042 adjustment of piston to head clearance. You may first have to mill the deck height .004 to true it up before determining the other numbers.
Which 351, Windsor or Cleveland?
School me a little. Why Windsor over Cleveland, other than the availability of aftermarket parts? I thought the 351C was a pretty good engine.If I go 351 it'd be Windsor.
School me a little. Why Windsor over Cleveland, other than the availability of aftermarket parts? I thought the 351C was a pretty good engine.
@rtk11 At this point I'm starting to lean towards the short block that's built by a reputable builder. I'd customize the pistons to get what I want there, and if it's one that they put a cam in, obviously I'd spec that as well. But it seems like the price delta I can get with that vs. buying another engine and messing with it myself isn't worth the hassle.
One interesting thing is that ATK, who seems to be one of the preferred short block providers for these projects, has 351 short blocks cheaper than 302s. So while I've been pretty convinced on the 302 up until this point, that aspect is making me rethink a bit. I'm going to ask some opinions on the Factory Five forum.
I would guess if you want a vote, you need to contribute to the process, motors ain't cheap.I vote for an assembled short block.
School me a little. Why Windsor over Cleveland, other than the availability of aftermarket parts? I thought the 351C was a pretty good engine.
There's a lot to be said for having a builder do the internals of the engine. Back when we did our own motors we mostly selected the pieces and handed them to the machine shop to put them all together. There was a lot of guesswork involved as to what would work with what, and we eventually found out that guys who did this sort of stuff frequently built the best engines. (Who knew, right?) When you do select a builder, he (or they) can probably help you with the 302 vs 351 question. Or you could just ask your wife, she seems to have a pretty good handle on this project.
I would guess if you want a vote, you need to contribute to the process, motors ain't cheap.
The one concern I have with a 302 is whether it will be torquey enough for my liking, as I am a torque person.
Something to consider...
I would guess if you want a vote, you need to contribute to the process, motors ain't cheap.
Compared with the frankenmotor a quality short block is cheap.
The one concern I have with a 302 is whether it will be torquey enough for my liking, as I am a torque person.
The zen approach: The question is not whether the engine is torquey or not but rather whether the chassis is light enough.
The one concern I have with a 302 is whether it will be torquey enough for my liking, as I am a torque person.
That sounds like the answer to your question.
The zen approach: The question is not whether the engine is torquey or not but rather whether the chassis is light enough.
Then he'd be building an 818.
Ted, just my thoughts: the 302 will make plenty of torque for a 2,400 pound chassis application... but if you're looking for a higher winding motor and a camshaft and intake to support higher RPM operation, that torque may not arrive until later in the RPM band. Alternatively, you could use an RV cam and build plenty of low-end torque, but the motor is going to run out of breath by 5,000 rpm.
If low end torque, but higher RPM capability is desired, you're going to want displacement. A 302 can be bored and stroked to 347 cubic inches (if the 1" taller deck height of a 351 will cause accessibility and hood clearance issues, especially if you intend to use a taller, single plane intake manifold). The 347 cubic inch bored/stroked combination is proven to turn to 8,000 RPM and make 546 hp and 435 lb-ft of torque. But this combination will also work to make more torque with a little lower horsepower if kept to a more streetable cam profile, dual plane intake, etc.
I think the 331 cid based on a 302 block is the sweet spot for a cobra build. Rod angles and piston speeds are way better than the 347, you get a torque bump over a 302 and it’s still a nice compact package for under the hood mx.
Out of all the options the 347 is the only one I would avoid.I've heard others make the same point. 331 gives you the weight and size advantages of the 302 with most of the displacement of a 347/351. I could buy a rotating assembly for $1k, but then I still need a block and machining work, etc., which would push the price to well over the 351.
Out of all the options the 347 is the only one I would avoid.
Otherwise it’s a tossup. There are sources to buy 331 short and long blocks.
That's actually not a bad price...
I've gotten some feedback from the Cobra group, and it seems that nobody who has a 351 wishes they had a 302 or 302-based engine. One point I received was that the bigger crank and bearing surfaces of the 351 do make it respond slower, but of course the engine itself is overall stronger. I want something really responsive and revvy. On the other hand, I'm not looking at spending the money on a stroker, at least not at this point. So given that, I'm leaning towards a 351 now.
It seems like ATK is a commonly used company. Curious if anyone has suggestions. I'll just be looking for a build short block.
The snappiness you're wanting will come from keeping the gas velocity up, so don't get too carried away with the carburetor, intake manifold, and headers. With all that motor in such a light car I can't see how it won't be responsive.
I was watching FantomWorks last night, and the crew put some insane big block in a 1953 Chevy pickup for some woman. If she stepped on in an any of the lower gears she got wheelspin.