Captain, your making more of an issue of this than is worth the time for you to type it.
Captain, your making more of an issue of this than is worth the time for you to type it.
This isn't stock where you're stuck with rules. I don't know about anyone else...but in my 4 spd car, I'm already going through 3500 rpm before I'm halfway through the pump shot. A 3.91 4spd 340 is into 6000+rpm real quick...smh A bunch of people who like to argue and talk garbage to others while preaching the mopar bible and using it to verbally backhand people meanwhile ignoring the most basic and obvious example that mopar gives...the 340. Smh Now which years did the factory 340 have more hp ? the 2.02 or 1.88 Were in which years? You talking about port velocity and 340's but using chevys as examples with valve head diameters. What are port volumes of a chevrolame sb again. Use whatever valve you want and build the motor and gear around it to make it work and prove a point, to each his own.ok, port velocity and shape are everything, port speed fills the cylinder, not valve size!! as for power, we have tested 2.02 and 1.88 valves on real flow bench. the 1.88 has more port velocity, vs the 2.02. flow is close. the X head was designed for 2.02 valve, the others were designed for 1.88 valve. now, to compare power, in stockers, the 1.88 headed engines are as fast as 2.02 headed engines. some exceptions are there. Chevrolet, went to 2.02 valves years ago. it was a marketing ploy! we tested a chev head with 1.94 and then he opened up bowl , installed 2.02 valve and retested, flow and velocity loss. imagine that!! valve type and seat angles are important to flow gains. I realize you can't brag on 1.88 valves. 2.02 , you can. lol. BTW, a 1.88 valve 340 runs to 7300 rpm in traps, doesn't lose power. 283 chev super stockers, with 1.75 valves run 9200 RPM. no power loss.
Just want to get it right the first time around, Rob.Captain, your making more of an issue of this than is worth the time for you to type it.
True, but don't forget the cam and compression changes, which probably make up the lion's share of the HP difference.Now which years did the factory 340 have more hp ? the 2.02 or 1.88 Were in which years?
What is right, because depending on opinions...you started wrong with those heavy pistons and wrong by not listening to your machinist or builder. If I were him and you came back with g stock advice and the other 101 ways to skin a cat... I might pass the job up to avoid the troubles of working with advice from a bunch of mostly arm chair racers on the net.Just want to get it right the first time around, Rob.
First...my machinist is not a fan of KB pistons and cites an abnormally high failure rate compared to other makes. He did not like the weight either but at 728g they are less than 10g heavier than the stock '68-71 piston, and they are forged. My only other option besides KB were all in the 6-700 dollar range and that was not gonna happen. I chose what would work for my budget. The old pistons (L2322F) were 660g and 12.5:1...which was simply no longer an option for a street motor on pump gas.What is right, because depending on opinions...you started wrong with those heavy pistons and wrong by not listening to your machinist or builder.
Hey you're good, as I said ...opinions. Technically you said you asked the builder and he told you to stay at 1.88 int valve.LOLFirst...my machinist is not a fan of KB pistons and cites an abnormally high failure rate compared to other makes. He did not like the weight either but at 728g they are less than 10g heavier than the stock '68-71 piston, and they are forged. My only other option besides KB were all in the 6-700 dollar range and that was not gonna happen. I chose what would work for my budget. The old pistons (L2322F) were 660g and 12.5:1...which was simply no longer an option for a street motor on pump gas.
Second...why am I not "listening to my builder"? He's on board with the .030 over pistons I've chosen along with the '69 forged crank, and has *suggested* a preference for Eagle SIR-I forged rods over reconditioning the stock forged rods...which makes sense. This should provide me with a very solid and strong bottom end IMHO.
This project is to be a solid street runner and will likely never be raced, or only to establish an ET baseline. But more likely not. Stock 340's are known to be hard, fast revvers...why should this be any different? I would rather lose a few seconds in ET than have a piston come apart or break a ring. At my age, I intend this to be the last time I will have the bottom end out of this engine.
The heads are the next item up in the batter's box, because the cam choice has to be based partially on compression and head flow...hence my question about the 1.88 valves. I have a set of 2.02 X-heads I could run on this thing but they've had no work done to them as the J's have previously. My question was not to start a range war, just to determine whether my builder was correct in stating that "for my intended purpose (street runner) the 1.88's will create more usable torque down low (6000 and below)". The time to do head work, porting and valve changes is now; before I select a cam or valve train. Also, I would like to note that while he does many, many engines yearly, he's not necessarily a Mopar guy, and moreso not necessarily a smallblock Mopar guy...(this in no way reflects anything bad on his part)...which is why I turned to the forum here; to get the answers from guys that build them and know them.
I'm not going bracket racing. I'm not gonna lose money if I run a half a second slower. I'm not running for 'pink slips'...I just want a car that starts easy and runs strong and will make me feel like a punk kid again when I wail on it.
Hope that clears the waters for some of you...and thanks for all the advice to date.
Well, now that you mention it......Have the guy flow the heads with the intake for fun.....
Well, IF it were "I", I'd jump to W2's and a smallish solid roller.I'd just run the 1.88's. for now.
True, but don't forget the cam and compression changes, which probably make up the lion's share of the HP difference.
Well, IF it were "I", I'd jump to W2's and a smallish solid roller.
ROFLMAO!!!!!!!!
Why stop there Maybe I should just stuff a hemi in there?Well, IF it were "I", I'd jump to W2's and a smallish solid roller.
ROFLMAO!!!!!!!!
Correct. The '68 340 with it's flat top 10.5:1's and the cam netted 275 HP. I'm striving for somewhere in the 300-400HP range.340 cams were all the same except the 68 manual transmission 340's. And they changed the way they measured Horse Power starting in 1972.
Well, my builder says 400HP no problem, but he hasn't recommended a cam yet so not sure where he's going with this.Big range, 100 hp is a lot in difference to each other.
300hp? Dead stock OE everything except headers and a 2-1/2 exhaust, muffler of your choice. Upgrade the ignition.
Correct. The '68 340 with it's flat top 10.5:1's and the cam netted 275 HP. I'm striving for somewhere in the 300-400HP range.