I was jokin with you, hence the "lol" at the end. Lighten up, Francis.Dummy? I guess you HAVEN'T ever seen a dyno sheet. You know , the one where horsepower goes DOWN at the end?
I was jokin with you, hence the "lol" at the end. Lighten up, Francis.Dummy? I guess you HAVEN'T ever seen a dyno sheet. You know , the one where horsepower goes DOWN at the end?
Me too !i have a std bore one .. should bring top dollar.
I had the chance a couple years ago to buy a standard bore 340 block, crank and heads for $500 and I passed, man was that dumb of me800?
1000?
Same thing would hold true
It's only dumb if that's what you need, myself I'd spend the money on the newer 5.9.I had the chance a couple years ago to buy a standard bore 340 block, crank and heads for $500 and I passed, man was that dumb of me
I didn't need it at the time but it would have made one heck of a investmentIt's only dumb if that's what you need, myself I'd spend the money on the newer 5.9.
With the same induction and exhaust as the 340, you'd skin the 340 every time.It's only dumb if that's what you need, myself I'd spend the money on the newer 5.9.
Obviously lighter reciprocating components will help with how fast/responsive an engine is.Short stroke 340s have HEAVY pistons, HEAVY. 4 inch crank small blocks have short very lite pistons. Like I said earlier my 414 revs way faster then my stock 340 ever did. If I stomp gas pedal to the floor the 414 will scream up to 6,000 rpm faster then it takes for gas pedal to go down, like fraction of a second...
Same old stuff.How did I miss this mess of a thread I'm late to the party
Ford 400 basically a 4" stroke tall deck 2bbl Cleveland with big block bellhousing.Now...here's one. Has any manufacturer ever built a square engine i.e. same size bore and stroke?
There is a reason the engineers pick certain dimensions.