dgc333
Well-Known Member
I'd put a 750 DP on it and toss the vacuum stuff to the curb.
My friend had a 360 built similar with a slightly smaller cam, iron heads with a 2500 convertor and 2.76 gear. It got 20 mpg on the highway and about 15 around town.
With that gear and convertor, the engine will eat up every bit of a 750DP you can give it.
If you are real good a tuning carbs you can likely get a 750DP to work acceptbaly on a 360 but to use all the capacity of a 750 cfm carb on a 360 you would need to be turning in excess of 7000 rpm, its simple physics. A more properly sized carb will plain simpley work better and be easier to tune in the operating range the car is going to be used.
The Street Avenger carbs are wet flow rated like Demon carbs so the 770 that has been mentioned would have a much higher rating if it was tested and rated like the older Holley carbs such as the 750DP, something on the order of 810 cfm. The 670 Street Avenger is much more an appropriate size for a medium built 360.
Carbs and cams are the one area where the bigger is better mentality slips in and its very hard to resist it. But the reality is you may pick up a .1 or .2 in the 1/4 with a 750 compared to something in the 650 range but you will definately have better low and mid range response and with the smaller carb.
If the brag factor of having a big carb is important then maybe look at a spread bore, something like a Thermoquad. This carb has tiny primaries that will provide excellent response an driveability and huge secondaries for the top end. I believe the 340's came with a Thermoquad that was rated at 800cfm. This worked very well because of those tiny primaries and the secondaries would never fully open any away.