Duster2022!
Well-Known Member
I recently built a BB 440 which dino at about 527 horse at 6500 RPMs. This motor is going into a street car. I was wondering if anybody had an idea of what some good street and strip gears to put in
Sorry but that is such a loaded question.I recently built a BB 440 which dino at about 527 horse at 6500 RPMs. This motor is going into a street car. I was wondering if anybody had an idea of what some good street and strip gears to put in
This will be my set up when I finally get around to installing my 383/727 combo in my Duster. Might be too steep for some, but works great for a 3 spd. auto trans.I run 4:10s with a 28" tires. At 60 MPH 3200 RPM. I really like this gear set up. orks great on the track and street.
Ultimately you want to run the gear that gives best quarter mile times for the strip part of your car, minus how much your willing to sacrifice for street. That's a you call, first I'd figure what the best gear should be for the track then if that's too deep for ya decide on best compromise.I recently built a BB 440 which dino at about 527 horse at 6500 RPMs. This motor is going into a street car. I was wondering if anybody had an idea of what some good street and strip gears to put in
This post nails it. Also, with regard to powerband at the strip, your converter is critical as well. Modern converter designs can allow you to have street manners, and the rpm range you want at WOT. Get a custom converter built for your combo - not an off the shelf unit!Ultimately you want to run the gear that gives best quarter mile times for the strip part of your car, minus how much your willing to sacrifice for street. That's a you call, first I'd figure what the best gear should be for the track then if that's too deep for ya decide on best compromise.
You built an engine that makes peak power at 6500 rpms so peak torque is probably around 5000 rpms basically the beginning of your main powerband. If you want to access that powerband you got to gear it so you can reasonably access it at various road speeds.
Agreed, I'd say in the street (and track) the converter is more important to get into the powerband cause at normal road speeds 20-50 mph you need a lot of deep gearing to get up there. A stall is kind like a continuous variable gears. But luckily a decent 440 should make a lot of 3000-5000 rpm power too.This post nails it. Also, with regard to powerband at the strip, your converter is critical as well. Modern converter designs can allow you to have street manners, and the rpm range you want at WOT. Get a custom converter built for your combo - not an off the shelf unit!
Like 90% of the OP's it's like their shy or something, post a question and sit back watch as we duke it out for 5-10 pagesO.P. must have not liked any of our suggestions. He hasn't been back to answer any of our questions or thank us.
Ingrate!
Funny how people fret about torque, but that's equivalent to losing 100 lbs-ft at the crank.Didn't roadkill garage switch the crop duster gears from 4.10 to 3.23 and it still ran the same ET and MPH?