Originally posted by betterthanyou
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Theoretically speaking....if 60 HP was required to maintain a higher speed, on a 4-banger, that's 15 HP per piston...but on a V8, that's 7.5 HP per piston. Then one would consider the surface area at the rod-crank journal to determine how much impact was happening there...and of course, the piston's mass/area in relation to denotational forces.
All mechanical things (bearings/pistons/etc) being equal between I-4 and V-8, then yes, your V-8 would have a much longer lifespan since HP loading per piston on it would be less.
Yes, the V-8 motor would outlast the I-4, but the V-8 will drink more fuel also....if you gained say 5 mpg with the I-4, then at $3.00/gallon, every:
100 miles = $3.00 lost
1,000 miles - $30.00 lost
10,000miles = $300.00 lost
100,000 miles = $3,000.00 lost
But, if you were doing highway driving all the time, use the V-8 motor.

that link is where I looked it up! I knew the 305 couldn't be bored, but was unsure of the stock bore on a 267. If the cyl walls were thick enough to allow that much bore, the engine would run forever hot.

Could this be tricky Dicks?
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