I had originally purchased a set of custom pistons that would accomodate a 5.7inch "4.3l" chevy rod with the hope of a simple build.
I figured that since the 3500 and the 4.3l have the same pin diameter and width, there would'nt a compatability issue. (both have "crank-pin"2.249-2.250 dia and .940 rod width)
Well guess what...After I went and purchased the rods, I soon discovering that the rods were offset and unusable in a 60 motor. So no Im taking a different approach. I decided to to use a 5.850 SBC rod and .070 copper head gaskets. The SBC "large journel" rods use a 2.100 "pin-dia". This gives me a total difference of .150 crank-pin diameter to play with.
The plan is to destroke the steel 3500 crank "3.310" down to "3.192" which will leave the piston sticking .030 proud of the deck. With the .070 headgasket, I will have a perfect quench of .040. As an added bonus, the new stroke will increase the redline to 7511 rpms while maintaining a "safe" 4000 ft/ per sec "piston-speed".
The real kicker is this......
3.720 bore (.020 overbore) + 3.192 stroke = 3.394 or 3.4 liters of displacement. (No kidding. It was a nearly perfect 207 cid)
Heh Heh heh....The old 3.4l being swapped for a...well, even an better 3.4l.
I figured that since the 3500 and the 4.3l have the same pin diameter and width, there would'nt a compatability issue. (both have "crank-pin"2.249-2.250 dia and .940 rod width)
Well guess what...After I went and purchased the rods, I soon discovering that the rods were offset and unusable in a 60 motor. So no Im taking a different approach. I decided to to use a 5.850 SBC rod and .070 copper head gaskets. The SBC "large journel" rods use a 2.100 "pin-dia". This gives me a total difference of .150 crank-pin diameter to play with.
The plan is to destroke the steel 3500 crank "3.310" down to "3.192" which will leave the piston sticking .030 proud of the deck. With the .070 headgasket, I will have a perfect quench of .040. As an added bonus, the new stroke will increase the redline to 7511 rpms while maintaining a "safe" 4000 ft/ per sec "piston-speed".
The real kicker is this......
3.720 bore (.020 overbore) + 3.192 stroke = 3.394 or 3.4 liters of displacement. (No kidding. It was a nearly perfect 207 cid)
Heh Heh heh....The old 3.4l being swapped for a...well, even an better 3.4l.
Comment