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Re: just contemplating my build... [UPDATED: 4/2/08] - ALL DYNO #s

Started by joflaig, November 14, 2007, 07:50:54 PM

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joflaig

I could live with 8mpg (lawful driving conditions).

firefighter3931

Quote from: max on November 16, 2007, 07:58:04 PM
Ron, you have put alot of great info into this build. :2thumbs:

but i have to be concerned with the commit that was made about him worring about gas milage. that makes me think that the whole combo as a package will not be matched right and will end in it not living up to it's full potential and may even end up as a disappointment.



Max, i understand your concerns.  :yesnod: This engine combo can be made to run descent as long as it's not lugging along. Keeping the lsa wide with a niceflat torque curve is the key. To achieve this end the engine will be pretty mild compared tp most stroker builds but the increased stroke will make it a torque monster allthough it likely will fall off before 6k. That's just the nature of the beast when compromises have to be made.


Ron
68 Charger R/T "Black Pig" Street/Strip bruiser, 70 Charger R/T 440-6bbl Cruiser. Firecore ignition  authorized dealer ; contact me with your needs

firefighter3931

Quote from: joflaig on November 17, 2007, 09:15:28 AM
Wow Ron, I am in your debt!

Yes, any more specifics you can provide about what you might envision in terms of cam would be appreciated. It's always good to go in armed when you visit the speed shop.

So given my overall goals of more power across the band, low-mid 11s with street tires and suspension (and better with slicks, etc), reliablity, low maintenance, and lastly *decent* fuel economy do you think everythng we've come up with so far foots the bill?

Thanks.

The Cam will have to be ordered directly from Engle. I would order it with a 3 bolt flank....it' a better/stronger attachmant point for the upper gear. The cam i would use is a k60 intake lobe/ k62 exhaust lobe (split pattern grind) on a 112* lsa.

On paper it would look like :

288/291 advetised duration
238/244 duration @ .050 valve lift
.534/.539 lift
112* lobe seperation


As for running mid 11's on street tires...it won't happen. This monster will blow off any street tire at will. The engine will make enough power to run in the 11's but getting it to the ground is another story.  ;) A set of slicks or MT drag radials will be needed for dragstrip duty.  :yesnod:

Power brakes will be no problemo and it will be easy to tune. As for a torque converter ; the turbo action 11in "hemi" converter would be a good match with this cam and your 3.55/28in tire combo.  :2thumbs:



Ron

68 Charger R/T "Black Pig" Street/Strip bruiser, 70 Charger R/T 440-6bbl Cruiser. Firecore ignition  authorized dealer ; contact me with your needs

max

Quote from: firefighter3931 on November 17, 2007, 07:21:49 PM
Quote from: max on November 16, 2007, 07:58:04 PM
Ron, you have put alot of great info into this build. :2thumbs:

but i have to be concerned with the commit that was made about him worring about gas milage. that makes me think that the whole combo as a package will not be matched right and will end in it not living up to it's full potential and may even end up as a disappointment.



Max, i understand your concerns.  :yesnod: This engine combo can be made to run descent as long as it's not lugging along. Keeping the lsa wide with a niceflat torque curve is the key. To achieve this end the engine will be pretty mild compared tp most stroker builds but the increased stroke will make it a torque monster allthough it likely will fall off before 6k. That's just the nature of the beast when compromises have to be made.


Ron

Ron thanks for clearing that up.

i figured a wide lsa on the cam would be great for the torque curve not too mention it would work well with the power brakes.


joflaig

I see phrases like "monster" and "pretty mild" and I'm not sure where that puts me. I wish someone in the neighborhood had a stroker, but no so luck!

In the post entitled "What torque Converter??? Fresh Rebuild 440" he's got a build sort of similar, I think, minus the stroker. Is the drop in torque and hp at about 5200 rpm on his dyno sheet sort of what you were referring to?

I'm so used to my stock 440, I'm trying to imagine percisely what this thing will drive like. When you say "blow off any street tire at will", what do you mean by that?

What stall on the turbo action 11 inch Street Hemi converter?

Thanks!

firefighter3931

Quote from: joflaig on November 18, 2007, 09:15:29 AM
I see phrases like "monster" and "pretty mild" and I'm not sure where that puts me. I wish someone in the neighborhood had a stroker, but no so luck!

In the post entitled "What torque Converter??? Fresh Rebuild 440" he's got a build sort of similar, I think, minus the stroker. Is the drop in torque and hp at about 5200 rpm on his dyno sheet sort of what you were referring to?

I'm so used to my stock 440, I'm trying to imagine percisely what this thing will drive like. When you say "blow off any street tire at will", what do you mean by that?

What stall on the turbo action 11 inch Street Hemi converter?

Thanks!


Strokers make monster torque as compared to a 440. By mild i am referring to the idle charachteristics and street manners of your proposed build. The cam profile largely determines how the engine will behave and with the cam that has been specced out it will sound mellow at idle compared to a smaller displacement engine (440) with a larger cam.  :yesnod:

By stroking the engine you are moving the powerband lower and with the right parts...substantially increasing that power.  ;)

Blowing the tires off at will means exactly that....stab the pedal and the tires will fry. It's hard to describe unless you've actually driven in one....but the low end power is unreal.  :icon_smile_big:

The TA hemi converter should flash stall at 3000 or so behind your motor. This will get the engine into the meat of it's powerband and launch the car like a missile. You need to match the stall speed to the rest of the combo or it will be a dog off the line. This often happens when guys overcam their engines and wonder why it won't spin the tires. I've seen it at least a hundred times on this board !  :brickwall:

The reason for the 2800 stall is because you want to drive this car on the hwy. Ideally you want to have the stall speed close to the cruise rpm to reduce heat. All converters will slip but the closer you are to the stall speed the tighter they are. TA builds a very nice converter and they are reliable and efficient (low slippage = reduced heat). The 11in converter is a good compromise for this build....enough stall to launch the car and efficient enough to keep you and the trans happy on the hwy. The less slippage you have the better the fuel economy will be....simple as that ! :Twocents:


Ron
68 Charger R/T "Black Pig" Street/Strip bruiser, 70 Charger R/T 440-6bbl Cruiser. Firecore ignition  authorized dealer ; contact me with your needs

max

QuoteThe reason for the 2800 stall is because you want to drive this car on the hwy. Ideally you want to have the stall speed close to the cruise rpm to reduce heat. All converters will slip but the closer you are to the stall speed the tighter they are. TA builds a very nice converter and they are reliable and efficient (low slippage = reduced heat). The 11in converter is a good compromise for this build....enough stall to launch the car and efficient enough to keep you and the trans happy on the hwy. The less slippage you have the better the fuel economy will be....simple as that !

Ron, i'm glad you posted that about keeping the convertor tight enough and not causing excess heat on the trans from a convertor that is too large or loose. :2thumbs:

this needed to be mentioned on alot of the builds i have been seeing on here.

several years ago there was a local fellow around here running a 1971 dart with a mildly built 340 along with a 4500 stall convertor and 4.56 gears which was a 50/50 car and he would take it to the track every weekend and drove the car to work during the week.

he had that trans rebuilt atleast twice every year and i could not get it across to him that the 4500 stall convertor was the reason for trans problem not too mention his track time was 8.40's in the 1/8 which should have been alittle better as well.

long story short he had more convertor then he had engine and it was hurting him all the way around. 

firefighter3931

Quote from: max on November 18, 2007, 10:19:04 AM
Ron, i'm glad you posted that about keeping the convertor tight enough and not causing excess heat on the trans from a convertor that is too large or loose. :2thumbs:



Max, a good quality converter will be tight for around town driving and loose when you want to race. The brand of converter has a lot to do with it's street manners. Having tried several different brands over the years i've concluded that this is one area where "you get what you pay for". It pays to buy quality in this area.  :icon_smile_big:


Further to that thought...i see no problem with running a high stall on the street as long as it's properly matched to the engine combo and the car has enough gear. I know several who run 8in (5000 stall) converters on the street w/o issue. Granted, these are not el cheapo $200.00 converters either.  :lol:

Quote from: max on November 18, 2007, 10:19:04 AM

several years ago there was a local fellow around here running a 1971 dart with a mildly built 340 along with a 4500 stall convertor and 4.56 gears which was a 50/50 car and he would take it to the track every weekend and drove the car to work during the week.

he had that trans rebuilt atleast twice every year and i could not get it across to him that the 4500 stall convertor was the reason for trans problem not too mention his track time was 8.40's in the 1/8 which should have been alittle better as well.

long story short he had more convertor then he had engine and it was hurting him all the way around.


Based on that description i would have to agree....the converter was waaaaay loose for that combo. More than likely it was slipping like crazy creating heat and fragging his transmissions. Converter technology has progressed substantially over the years and stall speeds that would have been considered "race only" are now commonplace on todays street cars. :yesnod:

I've got a Dynamic 9.5in 4500 stall going in mine with the 4.10 Dana and i'm not the least bit concerned.  :icon_smile_big: At normal off idle operation (light throttle) it will behave much like a stocker...maybe slightly looser but it will be lots of fun when the pedal gets mashed. Having driven in a few cars with the Dynamic 9.5 i have to say i'm impressed....it is a quality piece.  :2thumbs:

Turbo Action & PTC are other brands i'm impressed with. They work very well if specced properly for the application.  :icon_smile_cool:



Ron


Ps. Allthough this post is slightly off topic it is worth discussing in reference to the subject at hand. Hopefully it helps Joflaig understand converter selection a little better.
68 Charger R/T "Black Pig" Street/Strip bruiser, 70 Charger R/T 440-6bbl Cruiser. Firecore ignition  authorized dealer ; contact me with your needs

joflaig

So just to recap, here's the goal for this "mild" 500ci stroker build:

Use:
Primarily street/highway, couple times a year at the strip

Desire:
Better pickup off the line, more power across the band, 11s at the strip, very low maintenance, reliability, *decent* fuel economy (yeah, I know), fits stock hood, and lastly room for future growth (porting heads, etc)

Note: car has power breaks, 275/60/15 rear tires


Block:
Sonic check
cleaned, .030 overbored, honed, decked, align honed


Engine:
500ci Stroker Kit from 440 Source, premium parts, balanced, dished pistons
Indy Dual Plane 440 Intake
Indy EZ Heads (standard and fully assembled from indy)
Holley 950 dp HP series or a Proform 950hp carb (drop base air cleaner)
2" TTI Headers
MP Hemi 6qt Oil Pan
MP stroker Windage Tray

Engle Cam (k60 intake lobe/ k62 exhaust lobe --split pattern grind-- on a 112* lsa)
-3 bolt flank
-288/291 advetised duration
-238/244 duration @ .050 valve lift
-.534/.539 lift
-112* lobe seperation

Compression Ratio: 10-10.5:1
160-180 Thermostat
3 Bolt Timing Chain
ARP Studs
Aluminum Main caps

Tranny:
External Tranny Cooler
New Clutch
Turbo Action Hemi 11" Torque Converter (2800 stall)

Other:
3.55 Gears
MSD 6al Ignition (6000 rpm rev limiter)
MSD Blaster Coil
MP Distributor
Carter 120gph mechanical Fuel Pump (3/8 in fuel line, 3/8 in pickup for the gas tank)


What am I missing?


Ron, I've seen you mention both 3000 and 2800 stall, what would be the practcal difference?

I'm familier with the makers of aftermarket clutches and gears used with off-roading, what's popular for Mopar's?

What happens when you hit 6000 rpm with the rev limiter?

What would the practical difference be between 10:1 and 10.5:1 compression?

Thanks!

firefighter3931

Quote from: joflaig on November 18, 2007, 05:46:12 PM

What am I missing?


You will need to sort out the rocker arms and pushrods. I would use a set of the Crane adjustable ductile iron rockers with a heavy duty chrome moly pushrod. This will allow you to dial in the proper preload and with cam lifts exceeding .510 lift this is the better way to go. If you decide to go with a mechanical cam in the future....you will allready have the rocker gear to support it.  ;)


Quote from: joflaig on November 18, 2007, 05:46:12 PM

Ron, I've seen you mention both 3000 and 2800 stall, what would be the practcal difference?

I'm familier with the makers of aftermarket clutches and gears used with off-roading, what's popular for Mopar's?

What happens when you hit 6000 rpm with the rev limiter?

What would the practical difference be between 10:1 and 10.5:1 compression?

Thanks!


Converters are advertised for a range of operation. The 2800 stall would be behind say a mild 440 but behind a stroker it will flash up higher. The more torque you throw at it the higher it will stall.

Richmond or Strange will both carry a ring and pinion for your differential. There are probably a few other companies as well....

The MSD unit will start to drop cylinders when it reaches the rev limit. It's commonly referred to as a "soft touch" rpm limiter and is very safe.

The difference between 10 & 10.5 won't be that much. I looked on the 440 source website and they have a kit that is ideal for your proposed build. That kit uses a 27cc dished piston which yields a 10.1 compression ratio with the 75cc chamber EZ heads and a .040 Felpro head gasket. I would only bore the block to .030 if at all possible to keep the cylinder walls thicker and to maintain the structural integrity of the block.  :yesnod:

It's also worthwhile to have the block sonic checked while it's in the machine shop. This procedure measures cylinder wall thickness. There's no point in spending hundreds of dollars machining a block that has thin cylinder walls. This will only cause heartache down the road.


Ron
68 Charger R/T "Black Pig" Street/Strip bruiser, 70 Charger R/T 440-6bbl Cruiser. Firecore ignition  authorized dealer ; contact me with your needs

joflaig

You don't advice I buy the fully assembled ez heads or does Porter Racing do a bang up job putting in a custom valve train?

firefighter3931

Quote from: joflaig on November 18, 2007, 07:34:54 PM
You don't advice I buy the fully assembled ez heads or does Porter Racing do a bang up job putting in a custom valve train?


Dwayne at PRH sells the fully assembled heads and is an Indy dealer. Indy is known for it's poor customer service but they do make a great product. The advantage of using a distributor is that if there are any issues you can deal directly with them and not Indy.  :yesnod: There have been some quality issues with Indy over the years and sometimes defective parts make it out the door.  :P

Cylinder heads are his specialty so if he sends them out they will be right.  :2thumbs:



Ron
68 Charger R/T "Black Pig" Street/Strip bruiser, 70 Charger R/T 440-6bbl Cruiser. Firecore ignition  authorized dealer ; contact me with your needs

joflaig

Hey, Ron I posted the build as it stand so far on moparts and the first thing I got back was, go for the ez-1s!  :lol:

Anyway, there seems to be agreement that it's good build, but some opinions differ on the cam. They think a little bigger would work.

"go up at least 10 degrees on both lobes of your cam, something around 248/252"

If you care to bother here's the thread:

http://board.moparts.org/ubbthreads/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=3963293&an=0&page=0#Post3963293

firefighter3931

Quote from: joflaig on November 19, 2007, 12:59:33 PM
Hey, Ron I posted the build as it stand so far on moparts and the first thing I got back was, go for the ez-1s!  :lol:

Anyway, there seems to be agreement that it's good build, but some opinions differ on the cam. They think a little bigger would work.

"go up at least 10 degrees on both lobes of your cam, something around 248/252"

If you care to bother here's the thread:

http://board.moparts.org/ubbthreads/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=3963293&an=0&page=0#Post3963293



That's not surprising....most of the guys that posted on that thread are racers. I told you that this would be a mild build....very mild.  ;)

AndyF has built a few of these and his remarks were similar to what i originally proposed. The std port RPM head for strong throttle response and a lower powerband.  :yesnod:

They cams those guys are recommending are solid lifter profiles and you were wanting a hydraulic cam for zero maintenance. Like anything it just depends on what you can tolerate i suppose.

Andy's comments on the EZ heads are somewhat correct but the ICH DP will pick up some intake charge velocity due to the dual plane design. It's important to keep in mind the proposed powerband of this build....and how you are expecting it to behave.  :scratchchin:


There are lots of ways to make power and many different opinions on how to get there.  :icon_smile_big:



Ron
68 Charger R/T "Black Pig" Street/Strip bruiser, 70 Charger R/T 440-6bbl Cruiser. Firecore ignition  authorized dealer ; contact me with your needs

joflaig

So many options! :think:

I guess it's my understanding that to get stock RPMs to what the standard EZs are does require porting. Would there be an RPM combo that would be comparable to the all Indy combo? I like the fact that with standard EZs I have so much room to grow if I want to down the road. If however there is some advataged to custom RPM setup over the standard EZ+dp intake for what I intend to do....

max

you can ask 10 different engine builders about building an engine and you will get 10 different engine combinations, not saying any of them will be wrong but that is what you will get.

go with the one you trust the most and who has answered all of your questions right here with great detail and experiance to back his claims.

how's that for a plug Ron? :)

joflaig

 :icon_smile_big:

I agree...too many cooks in the kitchen can be a bad thing, but it doesn't hurt to have someone taste the soup before serving it!

firefighter3931

Thanks Max  :2thumbs:

Ok, here's a suggestion for you Joflaig....lets call it a field trip.  :icon_smile_big:

Member 1hot68 (Brian) has a freshly built stroker along the lines of what you are looking for. He also lives fairly close to you....a little over 200 miles....i checked both of your locations and mapquested it.  :icon_smile_cool:  My suggestion is that you get together with Brian and take him out for wings and a few pops and get a ride in his Charger.  ;D

That should pretty much answer your question as to whether an Edelbrock headed 505 will satisfy your needs.  ;)

Brian is a great guy and i'm sure he'd welcome the opportunity to meet a fellow member and show off his beautiful 68 R/T  :2thumbs:



Ron
68 Charger R/T "Black Pig" Street/Strip bruiser, 70 Charger R/T 440-6bbl Cruiser. Firecore ignition  authorized dealer ; contact me with your needs

joflaig

That's not a bad idea, thanks for the suggestion!

I guess the more I float this around the more I am hearing go with eddies. I guess the only question I have then would be given your knowledge so far of where this is coming from and going to, should the RPMs be ported and if so to what size? Would it make sense to go with an Eddy intake at the same time and are we talking about modfying the cam or stall at all?

firefighter3931

So when is the road trip.  :icon_smile_big: Honestly, it would be worth your while seeing as you are going to spend thousands building this engine.  :yesnod:

As for the E-heads ; i would have them drop shiiped to Dwayne for a Stage 1 port and prep. There is no need for a full on port job at the level you will be at. Full porting helps when valve lift exceeds .600 lift. What you need is a little help with the low/mid lift flow numbers to fatten up the midrange power. As for the manifold ; my first choice would be the Holley Street Dominator which is a low rise single plane. It will fit nicely under the stock hood with a 3in drop base filter and the 950 Proform/Holley double pumper. The SD manifold will give you a little extra breathing up top without hurting the bottom end torque output.


The original cam is fine with a 2800 stall....if you want more cam then the stall should be increased but that will reduce efficiency which is one of your major concerns. For a car that will be primarily cruised with the odd track day this is the way i would go. With your 3.55's and a 2800-3000 stall the car will be fun to drive and the engine will be as efficient as it possibly can be. This will be a low maintenance motor...tune ups and oil changes and that's it.  :icon_smile_big:

Your car on the other hand will be a different story....too much throttle stabbing and you'll be scraping rubber off your rear quarters.  :lol:



Ron
68 Charger R/T "Black Pig" Street/Strip bruiser, 70 Charger R/T 440-6bbl Cruiser. Firecore ignition  authorized dealer ; contact me with your needs

joflaig

I'm hearing a 512 is preferable to 500 and there would be no downside. Does this ring true? I know it fits in just the same and you would get a little more torque, but it seems to me nothing ever comes free?!

I think everything you have outlined is pretty finely balanced and tuned towards the goal. I am curious though what a slightly bigger cam might mean? Practically speaking what positive and negative effects would increasing it slightly have?

firefighter3931

Quote from: joflaig on November 19, 2007, 07:26:01 PM
I'm hearing a 512 is preferable to 500 and there would be no downside. Does this ring true?

Yes, the 4.25 stroke with a 7.1in rod is a better choice. The internal clearance is better (no grinding) and the long rod improves the rod ratio which helps in several ways ; less cylinder wall side loading (better longevity) and increased dwell time at the top of the bore which helps with torque curve and is important with a "smallish" for the displacement cylinder head. This type of build keeps the torque curve flat...power everywhere as opposed to a racier build where the powerband is comparatively narrower. Guys that race don't care what's happening at 2500 rpm if they're launching their cars at 4500. They don't care about fuel ecomomy, idle quality or have power brakes either.  :lol:

Quote from: joflaig on November 19, 2007, 07:26:01 PM
I am curious though what a slightly bigger cam might mean? Practically speaking what positive and negative effects would increasing it slightly have?


As cam duration increases the powerband will move up. Widening the lsa will flatten out the powerband and extend it in both directions given the same duration. The effect is that the power is linear instead of acute....meaning it comes on sooner and holds on longer but the sweet spot isn't as strong. That's really not much of an issue with a stroker because they make so much power to begin with. The other positive effect with widening out the lsa is that your idle quality will be quite good and it will be easy to tune and have plenty of vacuum for power brakes.

If you're curious about cam profiles go to the Comp Cams website and look for their tutorial on Valve timing....all the basics are covered.  :2thumbs:



Ron
68 Charger R/T "Black Pig" Street/Strip bruiser, 70 Charger R/T 440-6bbl Cruiser. Firecore ignition  authorized dealer ; contact me with your needs

Charger-Bodie

Quote from: firefighter3931 on November 16, 2007, 08:18:07 AM
Quote from: joflaig on November 15, 2007, 12:37:18 PM
What is lash adjustment? Is this something accessed without pulling the moror?

What do factory motors come with these days and do people with race motors almost always go with solid cams as a rule (I'm sure this could invoke endless debate)?

Since this is primarily a street car, I'm trying for build that requires less maintainence and results in excellent reliablity. My tinkering skills are limited.

Quote from: joflaig on November 15, 2007, 01:41:37 PM
...actually reading up on this topic, I can see a hydraulic cam will be the right choice for me.


Ok.... back on topic ; As you've discovered lash is a periodic valve adjustment that verifies the clearance between the rocker arm and valve tip. It needs to be checked every so often....on most street builds that means once a season. The whole operation takes 30-40 minutes and is easy to do.

If you don't want to pull the valve covers once a season then the hydraulic cam is what you will want.  ;)

Based on your driving style and intended use for this engine a hydraulic cam will work fine.  :yesnod:

The MW Indy EZ's are probably overkill as well.....you could easily get by with a set of mildly worked Edelbrock RPM cylinder heads and be several hundred dollars ahead. On a street build the "standard" port window on a stroker makes for one mean torquey bad azz motor. Just ask Brian ( 1hot68) how he likes his.  :icon_smile_big:


http://www.dodgecharger.com/forum/index.php/topic,35989.0.html



Ron
Hey Man, if you want to go for a ride sometime in my 505 stroker 5 speed dana 60 3.54 sometime let me know , if the weather holds up id be glad to take ya for a spin!! :D and if you have any questions i can help you with feel free to PM me anytime!! later Brian
68 Charger R/t white with black v/t and red tailstripe. 440 4 speed ,black interior
68 383 auto with a/c and power windows. Now 440 4 speed jj1 gold black interior .
My Charger is a hybrid car, it burns gas and rubber............

joflaig

Okay, guess I'm going with the 512 -- though I have seem comments that a 7.1 rod won't be as reliable over the long haul.


BrianShaughnessy

I'm going with the 6.8 rod combo 505 build.     Slightly taller piston should be more reliable for street use over the long haul.   I'll be using custom diamond pistons to get to the 10.5 that I want with my Eddys. 



Black Betty:  1969 Charger R/T - X9 440 six pack, TKO600 5 speed, 3.73 Dana 60.
Sinnamon:  1969 Charger R/T - T5 440, 727, 3.23 8 3/4 high school sweetheart.