66-67 273What are 920 heads and what do they come from (model/years)?
66-67 273What are 920 heads and what do they come from (model/years)?
From what I know, take that what it's worth... should be from the 2658920 head casting number. The 920 obviously the last 3 digits seems to have come from 67 and works with 273 and 318 LA motors. On the other hand for me I have 675 heads which is the 2843675 casting number fitting 318's from 68-74 (my block was replaced with a 1970 318 long before I got it).What are 920 heads and what do they come from (model/years)?
Unless you are racing the car, do yourself a favor and replace that cam with one more appropriate when you install your Edlebrock heads.I agree it's too big, I'm hoping to combat that with better air flow that crams more air into the cylinder since the intake valve doesn't close until 44* ABDC. But I'm just trying to make some solutions with out swapping the cam completely. personally I think a 340 or 360 intake with 360 heads could solve most of that...hopefully. lol
Thanks for the response!
I got a dumb question… say I get some flow numbers on whatever heads I end up with, 360 aluminum, ported 318… etc. what would getting a less aggressive cam actually do. I mean sure it’ll raise manifold vacuum since the one I have now only gets 10-12. It’ll idle smoother sure, sound probably smoother and less choppy. But what’s the benefit? Better mileage? Would I get better drivability? I mean I’ve taken it 30 minutes down the road didn’t seem to be any different. Just wondering in a practical sense.Unless you are racing the car, do yourself a favor and replace that cam with one more appropriate when you install your Edlebrock heads.
Better drive ability. better mileage, and more torque/power in the rpm band you use on the street.I got a dumb question… say I get some flow numbers on whatever heads I end up with, 360 aluminum, ported 318… etc. what would getting a less aggressive cam actually do. I mean sure it’ll raise manifold vacuum since the one I have now only gets 10-12. It’ll idle smoother sure, sound probably smoother and less choppy. But what’s the benefit? Better mileage? Would I get better drivability? I mean I’ve taken it 30 minutes down the road didn’t seem to be any different. Just wondering in a practical sense.
It may, it may not.I got a dumb question… say I get some flow numbers on whatever heads I end up with, 360 aluminum, ported 318… etc. what would getting a less aggressive cam actually do. I mean sure it’ll raise manifold vacuum since the one I have now only gets 10-12.
Not really. Both above quotes depend on how the cam is ground.It’ll idle smoother sure, sound probably smoother and less choppy.
Probable mileage gains. Possible better drivability. Depends on how the cam is ground.But what’s the benefit? Better mileage? Would I get better drivability?
The main thing about the cam is where it performs in. This is dictated by the duration. What rpm do you want the car to perform in?I mean I’ve taken it 30 minutes down the road didn’t seem to be any different. Just wondering in a practical sense.
Check the duration @.050 and you’ll change your mind much less look at any other spec of that cam. You’ll actually probably throw it away as garbage.That 7177 is too big for a 318. The duration is 300/310, if it's a hi revving bracket car maybe. JMO 65'