454 build, which pistons to get to 9:1?

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txaggie

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Howdy all,

My 454 went to the machine shop today for a block dip, new bearings, and valve jobs on the heads.

I’m adding in this Howard’s hydraulic roller cam and lifters, matching springs, headers, rpm air gap intake, Holley sniper, 2.5” x pipe exhaust. My question is should I do new pistons as well? This cam is geared for 1400-4900 rpm.

 
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txaggie

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Maybe the shop that helped with the block could help?

Short of that, there’s tons of compression ratio calculators online that you can use. https://butlerperformance.com/n-12872-compression-calculator.html

You could look up what chamber size you have, what head gasket and then plug it into the calculator- play with it a little and then find the piston dome/dish that fits your needs. Don’t forget to factor in the cc’s for the valve reliefs as well- piston manufacturers will list how much volume they are. Have fun!
 

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That is a mild cam and should work even with the stock compression. That being said it wouldn't hurt to deck the block a little (if for no other reason than to make sure it is flat and square) and have them mill the heads a little as well. Thin head gasket and it all adds up.

I would have them do a hone on the cylinders and new rings as well.
 

yevgenievich

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If trying to not mess with balance much, need to get weight of current pistons first. Then can start searching for different pistons. Is this tbi or vortec block?
 
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I’m running pistons with a 230cc dome, my machine shop said I should be about 9.4 comp (781 heads).
 

yevgenievich

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I was way off on which block. I am running flat top pistons with angle milled heads and mls gasket for 8.9:1.
 

txaggie

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I was way off on which block. I am running flat top pistons with angle milled heads and mls gasket for 8.9:1.
What pistons are you running? Peanut port heads?
 

txaggie

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Looking to get 8.5-9:1

That is a mild cam and should work even with the stock compression. That being said it wouldn't hurt to deck the block a little (if for no other reason than to make sure it is flat and square) and have them mill the heads a little as well. Thin head gasket and it all adds up.

I would have them do a hone on the cylinders and new rings as well.
Do you think this would be more bang for buck than just changing to a flat top overall? These are what my pistons look like now:

 
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Confused

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If your pistons and bore are good no reason to change them IMO. If they are out of spec then a dome pistons that puts you at 9.0-9.5-1 will help power everywhere.
 

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What pistons are you running? Peanut port heads?
I had rotating assembly balanced with new flat top pistons and aftermarket heads angle milled to about 108cc.
Vortec 96-99 bbc heads have 97 to 100cc chambers and give a bump in compression. On other motor I am planning to try finding domed pistons with similar to stock weight to reduce balancing issues.
 
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