play nice!You oughtta know. .......and you know in which orifice to put it.
play nice!You oughtta know. .......and you know in which orifice to put it.
I am.play nice!
Go to bed, Jim! LOLMy opinion. If the stock manifolds are a limiting factor in just flow (273 early A is likely a good example) then yes the shorties will help. Shorties (and stock manifolds) are too short to do what header’s actually are suppose to do, scavenging to actually boost power. You need about 28”-36” tubes to do that. Tube size is another hot topic. There is some simple math to size the tubes. If they are shorties and not helping with scavenging go as big as you want. If long tube too large it can cause a decrease in the wave velocity so it does have enough energy to do a good job of starting the backwards wave up the other cylinders tube to effectively scavenge the cylinder. Again simple math with the cylinder volume will size the tube.
Go to bed, Jim! LOL
Thanks, The money isn't a big issue as I have the NIB TTi step headers and could sell those and buy shorties for a break-even deal. BUT, shorties sound like they are good for ONE thing and it aint power gains. They simply appeal to me because, weight and it more clearance.i say if you can get the step headers to fit to your liking use them. picking up some precious torque in the midrange and getting some horsepower when you're legging it out instead of shifting on the course might be worth fractions of a second.
i wouldn't say that headers would be "necessary" for your application and intended power goals, but i would certainly recommend it, or 340 manifolds if you've got those on the shelf.
will shorties be better than manifolds, sure but not by a wide margin. it's up to you to decide if that margin is worth 7~800 bucks.
My main concern was serviceability and ground clearance using a 4-speed.
And no regrets when you have the skinny pedal mashed down?I have no issues with TTI shorty headers. 408 Six Pack.
Thanks. When I had everything mocked up there was significant interference with big bars. Not that it couldn’t be massaged but with my meager power requirements (mid to high 300’s) how are long tube headers going to perform? How will it benefit me to have 500 horsepower headers on a 350 hp engine? Can you have too much header? Real question.If engine access is you're concern, what's to access down the side of the block below the ports, with shorties winding back and forth you can't even see the side of the block.
People act like you take headers off every week.
I raced for years, took heads off over the fender, loose headers, long or short once undone move back and forth a few inches to access the head bolts, other than that, what access do you think you need.
Fitment to torsion bar is usually at the collector, if it's close and needs a tweek, I use a ratchet strap around the trans or T-bar, being carefull not to trap cooler lines etc, then cinch it up till the header bends enuff for the minor clearance. More clearance needed, I have stuck a fence-post up the collector, then a nudge one way or other, (don't knock the vehicle off the lift). I have also put a ratchet strap around that fence-post and the leaf spring, and sucked it over. Another instance on a bb Chally, I put the header in a vice and "draw filed" the head flange to make the header leave the head at a different angle for clearance on something. (That header was fucked from factory)
You don't have to Change the angle at the head much, go get a 3/16 clearance down by steering .
I haven't had to ding a header in years since I realized I can bend the header as a whole to eliminate a rattle, or create clearance without a hammer, thus not fracturing the ceramic coatings inside or out.
Hope it helps, cheers