TravisB
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Jan 3, 2018
- Posts
- 1,147
- Reaction score
- 1,272
- Location
- Kentucky
- First Name
- Travis
- Truck Year
- 1978
- Truck Model
- C10
- Engine Size
- 350
I'm to the point in my rebuild on my 78 c-10 that I need to start on the engine. My truck didn't have the original engine in it but it was pretty tired and wasn't running properly when it got parked a decade before I got it.
I have a couple of options and am curious about the most cost effective solution to get my truck back on the road. I have the long term plan of making this my daily driver with an LS swap and complete body restoration but that will be a long way down the road and I would like to get it back on the road so I can drive it while I save my dollars for that.
The truck came to me with a 1969 date coded block and double hump heads and the issue of not running well enough to keep the truck going. I have torn that engine down and found no huge glaring issues other than the oil pump collar being broke, the oil pump pickup wasn't connected to the pump, there's a larger ring groove than I would like to see, and several valves are no longer air tight on the heads.
I have another 350 that was a GM crate engine at some point in it's life. Low compression heads, nothing to write home about but we aren't building a race car here anyway. That engine had a cam wiped and got full of cam material but otherwise was a pretty fresh rebuild.
My local machine shop quoted 400 dollars for the head work alone on the double humps. Hot tank and new freeze plugs and cam bearings with cylinder cleanup was another 400. So the engine that came with the truck would run me 800 bucks before I buy new pistons, rings, bearings, cam, lifters, gaskets etc. I see the price climbing sky high and that being the engine I leave there for a long time instead of doing the LS swap plan.
So this is where I am. Do you guys have any recommendations on how to thoroughly remove the old cam material from the fresher engine? Would you do some combination of the two like using the bottom end from the crate motor and have the head work done on the double humps or vice versa, get the bottom end work on the 69 engine and use the smog heads to save dollars? With both options I have to buy a cam and lifters, and gaskets so I know I have that expense but I want to keep the budget low and most the work here at home.
While you are at it, any cam recommendations for a driver that might be asked to tow as much as a zero turn mower once every couple of weeks on a 10' trailer? It will be in one of these 350s with an edelbrock performer, holley 670 street avenger, and headers.
PS: I added some pics from the engine tear down in my build thread linked in the signature. It's scattered all over my garage so getting my work bench back is pushing this to the front of my (s*** or get off the pot list)
I have a couple of options and am curious about the most cost effective solution to get my truck back on the road. I have the long term plan of making this my daily driver with an LS swap and complete body restoration but that will be a long way down the road and I would like to get it back on the road so I can drive it while I save my dollars for that.
The truck came to me with a 1969 date coded block and double hump heads and the issue of not running well enough to keep the truck going. I have torn that engine down and found no huge glaring issues other than the oil pump collar being broke, the oil pump pickup wasn't connected to the pump, there's a larger ring groove than I would like to see, and several valves are no longer air tight on the heads.
I have another 350 that was a GM crate engine at some point in it's life. Low compression heads, nothing to write home about but we aren't building a race car here anyway. That engine had a cam wiped and got full of cam material but otherwise was a pretty fresh rebuild.
My local machine shop quoted 400 dollars for the head work alone on the double humps. Hot tank and new freeze plugs and cam bearings with cylinder cleanup was another 400. So the engine that came with the truck would run me 800 bucks before I buy new pistons, rings, bearings, cam, lifters, gaskets etc. I see the price climbing sky high and that being the engine I leave there for a long time instead of doing the LS swap plan.
So this is where I am. Do you guys have any recommendations on how to thoroughly remove the old cam material from the fresher engine? Would you do some combination of the two like using the bottom end from the crate motor and have the head work done on the double humps or vice versa, get the bottom end work on the 69 engine and use the smog heads to save dollars? With both options I have to buy a cam and lifters, and gaskets so I know I have that expense but I want to keep the budget low and most the work here at home.
While you are at it, any cam recommendations for a driver that might be asked to tow as much as a zero turn mower once every couple of weeks on a 10' trailer? It will be in one of these 350s with an edelbrock performer, holley 670 street avenger, and headers.
PS: I added some pics from the engine tear down in my build thread linked in the signature. It's scattered all over my garage so getting my work bench back is pushing this to the front of my (s*** or get off the pot list)