Grabinov911
Well-Known Member
- Local time
- 12:19 AM
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2012
- Messages
- 557
- Reaction score
- 252
- Location
- Southern California
OK so a buddy of mine ran the Silver State Classic (in a 65 Mustang) and I can't get it out of my head!
My 70RR resto has been going along great and the car runs well on the stock 383 (only 50k miles) and the 3.23 rear end. I've got it all set up with Firm Feel suspension parts because I'm a handling geek - not so much because I thought I needed them, but maybe I do...
I just bought, magnafluxed and sonic checked, standard bore, 1970 440HP block to use to build a new motor for the car. Again, not cause it NEEDS a new one, but because I've never built a car engine before (done motorcycles) and I've always wanted to. I have a local machine/hot rod shop to help me with the build. They are used to building hot rod "drag" engines, and they build some pretty hot inboard boat engines.
Question: If I want to build my 440 for roadracing, or going really fast (about 100mph average) in a relatively straight line over a long distance (90 miles), what do I tell my hot rod shop guy about cam selection, compression, carb specs, etc.? I'm guessing this is a somewhat different engine than one build to run for 11 seconds from idle to 8,000 rpm, more like a boat engine which runs high rpm under heavy loads for long periods of time...
Do I need to switch to a manual trans? Or an overdrive (probably)?
Greg
My 70RR resto has been going along great and the car runs well on the stock 383 (only 50k miles) and the 3.23 rear end. I've got it all set up with Firm Feel suspension parts because I'm a handling geek - not so much because I thought I needed them, but maybe I do...
I just bought, magnafluxed and sonic checked, standard bore, 1970 440HP block to use to build a new motor for the car. Again, not cause it NEEDS a new one, but because I've never built a car engine before (done motorcycles) and I've always wanted to. I have a local machine/hot rod shop to help me with the build. They are used to building hot rod "drag" engines, and they build some pretty hot inboard boat engines.
Question: If I want to build my 440 for roadracing, or going really fast (about 100mph average) in a relatively straight line over a long distance (90 miles), what do I tell my hot rod shop guy about cam selection, compression, carb specs, etc.? I'm guessing this is a somewhat different engine than one build to run for 11 seconds from idle to 8,000 rpm, more like a boat engine which runs high rpm under heavy loads for long periods of time...
Do I need to switch to a manual trans? Or an overdrive (probably)?
Greg