Hey is anybody Running one of these kits from 440 source. Im especially interested to know of anyone using it in a 383 block. They only have a couple of options for the 383 but I havent talked to anyone that runs one.
With the long stroke of the piston the skirt may come out of the bottom of the cylinder some at the bottom of the stroke....short skirts on the pistons tend to flap around more than long skirted pistons..thus a little slapping noise as they are pushed pack up into the cylinder...this is the easiest way to explain it...get some good books on Big Block Mopars they are very much worth the $20.00 bucks each cost..This is my first engine build. Ill be having a proffesional assemble the engine. Can you explain piston slap and how short skirts causes it. Sry if this is common knowledge.
With the long stroke of the piston the skirt may come out of the bottom of the cylinder some at the bottom of the stroke....short skirts on the pistons tend to flap around more than long skirted pistons..thus a little slapping noise as they are pushed pack up into the cylinder...this is the easiest way to explain it...get some good books on Big Block Mopars they are very much worth the $20.00 bucks each cost..
No 383 but a 600 hp 440 stroked out to 520 ci.....a little piston slap from the short skirts...and not out of the box....have the entire rotating assy...balanced again...good bang for the buck...they offer more options for the 400 and 440 though...my buddy Paul's car
Yep...best bang for the buck and not out of the box.....Eric, so your saying the 440 stroker kit is a good one? sorry...i'm lost tonight
By the way I love that car/truck...383 - 496
like above piston slap from short skirts. stealth heads out of the box
Comp cams Hydraulic roller 23-713-9
11.4 @ 118
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=__2lLQAvEOQ
Some of what yall are referring to as piston slap may be from full floating wrist pins. Real piston slap usually goes away when the engine warms up. Course, with these short skirted pistons, things are bound to be different. But the full floating pins are usually responsible for more noise than the actual piston to bore clearance. Because the floating pins allow the piston to wiggle around a little to relieve stress, they usually make a slight "diesel" type knock, especially at higher cylinder pressures.
I agree with both of you...my friend has their 520 440 stroker kit....this kit does have shorter piston skirts and his noise does get less noticable after the engine warms up...What stroker said. If the pistons rattled at the bottom of the bore, they's shave off aluminum and it'd be blown in under a minute of run time if that long. Piston slap is when the engine's cold and the pistons are too. It is mostly a thing of the past unless an engine has some passes or was set loose. Short pistons are less stable because of the lack of distance between the skirts and the ring stack. They tend to have more piston rock as TDC and the rings lose sealing ability much faster, in addition to the ring lands wearing out faster. Anything that is shorter than a 1.500 compression height will usually have a problem with longevity amd ring seal will be substantially less over time.
Definitely nice ride Zander.ZanderZone- love that ute! If I had the means, I'd bring one to the US and convert it to LHD and drive it around. It would confuse the locals and any Ozzie or Kiwi that happens to see it, besides I've driven a LHD it England and it sucked for visibility.