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I have in my vast collection of junk.A good 350 target master engine shortblock.I have a pair of 993 casting heads, and a pair of swirl port 193 throttle body heads. Also have an edelbrock performer mani. W/ egr provisions.Carbs I have a vac secondary 600 Holley.An edelbrock performer carb and a rebuilt qjet. Last but not least a pair of long tube headers.Going into a 1985 C10, goal 400 ft lbs torque and somewhere around 300hp with reasonable gas mileage.My thoughts are the qjet, run the egr, the swirl port heads, and a isky 264cam. .480 lift 264 advertised duration 214 duration at.050 108 LSA. Any input would be appreciated.
You didn't annoy me.I was trying not to annoy you guys.And I never tell people right off what I've done seen etc. I don't want to come off like a know it all.Nobody knows it all!!!.Just like I sometimes wonder why take 30 thousandth off the top of a block for zero deck or mill a head for compression when I could offset grind the crank,to get zero deck or gain compression.It makes sense to me just haven't tried it yet.But I am sure someone knows why it's a bad idea.
Yes, even a flat top piston (with 4 valve reliefs) in an otherwise stock 350 (76cc combustion chamber, .038" gasket, and 9.025" deck height) will get you only around 8.5:1 according to my calcs.the 993s are runners up but they do have some hope. They are a heavy enough casting you can port them. You can put bigger valves in them like 2.02 int/1.60 exh... for starters. But still a large chamber so it's tough to get any compression without domed pistons.
Just saw this, but decking the block, running a thinner head gasket,milling the head, flat top piston or parking the piston higher in the bore will all raise the compression.I have built 1 bored, decked, and squared 355. Most of my engines have been zero deck but not done exactly right. I assemble the shortblock measure my deck height disassemble and have it decked so I have.040 squish when I reassemble it.Now for made up numbers if the piston is parked .030 down the hole and you have the crank offset ground .020 now you are parked .010 in the hole you use a .030 head gasket and you'd have a cheap 0 deck motor.With stock rods and piston just .030 rod bearings.Now it over heats and your next block is..010 shorter you run a .040 head gasket and your still in good shapeReading back through I saw this post so figured i'd throw my .02 in on it. The biggest reason, it's just not feasible. especially cost wise. Decking a block and milling heads are done for two separate reasons. All things being equal, you deck a block to get as close to or right at "zero" deck height. The most effective, most efficient is to have the piston within zero to a few thousandths from zero. A little wiggle room for piston rock isn't a bad thing. Decking heads is done to raise compression. (obviously decking either is also done to clean up mating/gasket surfaces) If you offset grind the crank, you can in theory simply go to a smaller journal connecting rod but now you have to buy custom pistons with an offset piston pin to counter the offset crank throw. And when it's all said and done, those parts are now specific to that very engine block. say you get it hot and warp or crack it, if it was setup for a theoretical -.030 deck height offset ground into the crank journals but your replacement block is closer to .005 (this theory by the way is measuring the correct way from the crank journal to the deck surface) you now have to cut .025 off of every piston or order a set of pistons that are .025 shorter from the head to the wristpin. Even though i'm using theoretical numbers here, You see where this is going right.. All manufacturing processes have tolerances of +/- a certain amount, so you measure up from the crank journals to the deck of the block and figure out how much to take from there if you want to achieve zero deck height. And then if we want to get critical we measure across the surfaces of the block from crank journals up from front to back of the block to see how much variance there is. it can be off up and down as well as front to back. that's part of engine blueprinting-making sure the engine is "square" and everything is equal. You can't gain compression by offset grinding the crank, all things equal the pistons would be sticking out of the bores. That's why there's flat top and domed pistons, you either make the combustion chamber of the head smaller or the piston heads themselves larger to increase compression. BUT, for a cheater engine offset grinding a factory crank is a great way to make cubic inches and or rpm's! And it all looks stock by the numbers if the engine ever gets teched! So I've heard anyway.. Lol