Anybody know what the compression ratio would be on a 1973 dished pistons Cleveland with 4 bbl open chambered heads?too low to make decent power?thanks
Ok,this motor was rebuilt not too long ago and was punched .030 over but stock style dished so I'm looking for the easiest way to make a eecent motorI put closed chamber heads and a cam in my 73 and got 300 at the rear wheels before I dropped a valve. Depends upon the condition of the bottom end and your goals
If you are willing to rebuild, pop up pistons can make the stock block and heads capable of significantly more power.
My opinion is that 10:1 compression is really about the baseline for building respectable power but then again, I tend to overbuild
Ok,thanks for the help.If you are not looking at doing popups or at least flat tops, then CC heads would get the compression ratio up to where you need to be. Once you determine your course of action on this front you will need to decide on a different cam. When I was starting mine I called comp cams and discussed in detail what I was doing and what I was shooting for and we came up with a custom grind. I also went full roller valve train as the cam they spec'd would destroy a flat tappet in no time. I believe the stock dished pistons have are 8 cc's. Hope this helps.
Thanks,the biggest issue is that I don't know enough about motors to feel confident changing pistons,is it difficult?spany special tools involved?thanks.Hi
You can use flat pistons and shave the heads down to 67-68 cc. It should give you about 9.5.1 of course heads should be shave in both directions.
Regards Rob
If the bore is good I'd change the Pistons to flat tops, rehone to suit new Pistons
and for the new rings, deck the block to zero deck height, decide on the compression ratio you want and mill your heads to suit. Nothing at all wrong with open chamber heads and those who say there is don't know the Cleveland head design at all. Also compression isn't the be all and end all it once was I've read about a few builds over the last few years. One of them was a 9.0:1 comp ratio hydraulic roller cam engine making over 550HP. If yours are the 73 small valve open chamber heads, then even better. I'm using those same heads on my street engine build and helping a couple of others with theirs. I spoke with a guy not long back that's been using those heads for decades in the class he races in very successfully and also laughs how people think these heads are junk and loves them because they're cheap as no one that doe
thanks
sn't know their potential doesn't want them. He does by his Pistons semi finished on the dome and keeps his finished dome design a very closely guarded secret. No need to
thanks for the info.
purchase other heads.
I should have mentioned I am going to run a lumpy solid roller to bleed off a little dynamic compression.The static compression ratio is a starting point, but the dynamic compression ratio is what tells you what fuel you need to run. With quench heads and a decent cam 11:1 may be OK on pump gas.
https://www.7173mustangs.com/thread-engine-and-compression-calculations
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