Lonnie Leach
Duster/ Valiant
Opps you are rightI think there's an extra zero there !
Opps you are rightI think there's an extra zero there !
76,000 rpm? Get a clue!
Have a clue just fat fingers76,000 rpm? Get a clue!
Sorry, no converter needed with a 4spd .......
7600-7700 falls short of 8000. Really, nothing is secret about building an 8000 rpm small block. ka ching !!1Don't let the self proclaimed DR . Give you info ..If you reduce your rotating Mass by knife edging and lighting your crank have pistons made with a small block Chevy wrist pins thin ring pack with gas port holes and smaller skirts use high side of your clearances to get your parasitic resistance down to a bout 10lbs to rotate your lower end..Get some Program Billet steel 4 bolt main caps and a good Machinist to do your work.. Of course you need to run a sump style oil pump,Good heads, cam and valve train..Not going to give you all My secrets..lol But I shift mine at 7,600 to 7,700 and Pulls up to that #
Hope some will see a typo and not actuality think that76,000 rpm? Get a clue!
When I first started reading I thought "this guy sounds like he knows what's going on" until I got to all those zeros at the end of your post. LOLHope some will see a typo and not actuality think that
Of course it can be done. We can lift heavy objects into space.
Is it cheep, no.
With good people and enough money almost nothing is out of reach. Just how bad do you want it and do you want to try and make a falcon 9 fit for trips to the ice cream shop?
Back to my NASCAR engine suggestion. They are designed and built for high rpm..It actually isn't that much money. Most everyone (except the Chrylser people...for various reasons) already have an aftermarket block.
Valve train components are so far ahead of what they were 25 years ago, and are relatively inexpensive that it doesn't make sense to not use good parts there anyway.
Connecting rods, dampers, lightweight pistons and rings...all that stuff guys are already using anyway.
So cost isn't really a factor.
Now, if you are stuck with OE Chrysler architecture then that's a horse of a different feather.
Don't let the self proclaimed DR . Give you info ..If you reduce your rotating Mass by knife edging and lighting your crank have pistons made with a small block Chevy wrist pins thin ring pack with gas port holes and smaller skirts use high side of your clearances to get your parasitic resistance down to a bout 10lbs to rotate your lower end..Get some Program Billet steel 4 bolt main caps and a good Machinist to do your work.. Of course you need to run a sump style oil pump,Good heads, cam and valve train..Not going to give you all My secrets..lol But I shift mine at 7,600 to 7,700 and Pulls up to that #
Link for those interested?Go on Moparts and check out the post in the race section. That was an expensive crank in an expensive Ritter block that was built for high rpm. Bunch of scrap metal now on a high dollar build.
Go on Moparts and check out the post in the race section. That was an expensive crank in an expensive Ritter block that was built for high rpm. Bunch of scrap metal now on a high dollar build.
Shilo had some coin wrapped up in that motor. It isn't your everyday build.
Yea you know how it is when you are typing and thinking it in your head and you punch the button to many times..Need to proof read better ..lolWhen I first started reading I thought "this guy sounds like he knows what's going on" until I got to all those zeros at the end of your post. LOL
That broken motor is a FORD !! LOL
I think that's a picture off the web that was posted as an example of a HUGE explosion.
I think the only picture Shilo posted was a crank with a rod and maybe a piston.
That broken motor is a FORD !! LOL
I’ve buried a 9,000 rpm tach more times then I can count for over a decade in a 340
Dual purpose street strip car. Nothing exotic or expensive.
Only issues were an occasional broken valve spring, which meant I carried a spare, and got pretty good at changing at the strip.
Ported J heads with the .557 sold cam and a 160 pounds of valve seat pressure.
4.56 gears, and 4500 stall 3200 lb Dart in my profile
I’ve buried a 9,000 rpm tach more times then I can count for over a decade in a 340
Dual purpose street strip car. Nothing exotic or expensive.
Only issues were an occasional broken valve spring, which meant I carried a spare, and got pretty good at changing at the strip.
Ported J heads with the .557 sold cam and a 160 pounds of valve seat pressure.
4.56 gears, and 4500 stall 3200 lb Dart in my profile
11.70s In the quarter 7.40s in the eighth on the motor.What did it run at the track.