WHAT CNC-PORTED SBF HEAD MAKES THE MOST POWER? KAASE v AFR v TFS R v DART v CNC VIC JR & HIGH PORT?

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  • Опубликовано: 20 июл 2022
  • AFR VS TFS HEAD SHOOTOUT-WHO WINS? WHAT IS THE MOST POWERFUL HEAD CHOICE FROM MY HIGH-COMPRESSION, 427 FORD STROKER? DOES MAX AIRFLOW MAKE THE MOST POWER? HOW MUCH POWER DOES COMPRESSION ADD? CAN AN AS-CAST HEAD COMPETE WITH A CNC PORTED HEAD? HOW MUCH POWER DO EDELBROCK VICTOR JR. HEADS MAKE? ARE THE AFR 225 HEADS BETTER THAN THE TWISTED WEDGE R HEADS? CHECK OUT THIS COMPARISON BETWEEN 8 DIFFERENT HEADS ON A HIGH-COMPRESSION, ROLLER CAM 427 STROKER. THIS IS PART 4 OF MY ULTIMATE GUIDE TO SBF CYLINDER HEADS, WITH TESTING ON 225 CC OR BIGGER HEAD PORTS.
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Комментарии • 387

  • @ts302
    @ts302 Год назад +7

    Thank you Mr. Holdener for the SBF tech!!!!

  • @terryg1129
    @terryg1129 Год назад +3

    Thanks for taking the time to do this, just bad ass!

  • @aaronliddell4280
    @aaronliddell4280 Год назад +6

    THIS IS THE TEST WE’VE BEEN WAITING FOR!!! 👍

  • @chrishansen7004
    @chrishansen7004 Год назад +24

    Love to see these big stroker smallblocks, boosted rigs are awesome but na throttle response is to die for

  • @richdouche8253
    @richdouche8253 10 месяцев назад +5

    Thing I like about the Trick Flow and AFR heads is they're always near the top of the pack in these tests.
    These tests are not 100% conclusive because one head may benefit from different cam timing and intake and header design than another head. So one could always build the engine around a particular head and be shown that that particular head performed better overall.

  • @ferdinandcuevas8457
    @ferdinandcuevas8457 5 дней назад +1

    That is an awesome idea do Dyno test of effects of header sizing with the deferent cylinder heads and also collecter length effects on torque and hp especially on an engine for the road ⁉️ Great content ! Thank You . 🇺🇸🇵🇷🦊👍

  • @royhickok3213
    @royhickok3213 Год назад +3

    Really enjoyed this test Richard

  • @TomSmith-cv8hk
    @TomSmith-cv8hk Год назад +2

    Agree with your take on the header size.

  • @andreawhalen4142
    @andreawhalen4142 Год назад +10

    I would guess the more the heads flow the more negative effect the small headers would give

  • @modmatt89coupe
    @modmatt89coupe Год назад +1

    Love this I purchased a 427 car with ported pro topline 215cc heads and I couldn't find much info on them. I had no idea where I would be at.

  • @jeremymardlin5381
    @jeremymardlin5381 Год назад +16

    On that cubic inches I would likely choose CHI 3V heads.

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  Год назад +4

      those work well

    • @elmerfudpucker3204
      @elmerfudpucker3204 Год назад +6

      Yep, when they get cubic inches into the 400s, the cleveland style heads are the ones to go to, no doubt.

    • @I_like_turtles_67
      @I_like_turtles_67 9 месяцев назад

      ​@elmerfudpucker3204 headders can get expensive on those. Hell... Even inline valve headders are expensive. I just ordered a set and they're over 1500 bucks ceramic coated.

  • @Rickgrott100
    @Rickgrott100 Год назад +4

    The header size would not change the results head to head from what I have tested. Thanks for sharing the results

  • @chriswalker2718
    @chriswalker2718 5 месяцев назад +3

    Forgot about one other good in-line head fully ported z304 head and there is highports with that flow more than that Tfs r head

  • @badstimpy
    @badstimpy Год назад +3

    Love to see a SBC version of this video , PLEASE DO THE VICTOR JUNIOR HEADS !!

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад +1

      Vic Jr sets in between the best inline heads and the TFS TWR heads.

  • @FingerJam12
    @FingerJam12 11 месяцев назад

    the different compression ratios makes a big difference. 10 percent carried over to hp is consistent. cool test and video thanks.

  • @brianhanel6897
    @brianhanel6897 Год назад +1

    Yes they would and the valve job itself can caut you big power gains as well

  • @danbucceroni8607
    @danbucceroni8607 Год назад +1

    Still is amazing the bang for the buck from a set of Edlebrock heads.

  • @jarez3781
    @jarez3781 Год назад +4

    I think the test was a good test. If the headers were bigger they all would've made more power but I doubt that one would've leapfrogged another head in power output. Maybe the heads would have been better with each of them having a cam dedicated to the needs and or the qualities of each set of heads. Other than that it was an awesome test and that much more I love trick flow twisted wedge heads.

  • @aaronliddell4280
    @aaronliddell4280 Год назад +24

    So the lesson learned here is that the TFS R heads beat out everything! Even the AFR which had a half point more compression!

    • @glennramsey917
      @glennramsey917 Год назад +3

      It does with that certain combination ..I wonder what would happen if he done a cam change my a compression change .. maybe different crank n rods (stroke) .. would those heads out perform all the others then ?????

    • @RyTrapp0
      @RyTrapp0 Год назад +4

      You gotta keep in mind how long ago this test was, and how far the porting programs have come. If you ask anyone today between the two, pretty much the universal opinion is High Ports over Twisted Wedges, because guys are getting more power from the HPs today with modern porting programs. I also wonder if these are the older revision HPs too, Tooley revised them when he was with Trick Flow and that's a big reason why HPs are what they are today.
      I wouldn't say this is a 'grain of salt' test, but you definitely have to be aware of how things have changed today. Make use of ALL data(the greater the variety of testing, the better) you have available for guidance, so the results of one test don't mislead you.

    • @michaelreilly7977
      @michaelreilly7977 Год назад +2

      But twisted wedge aren't considered an inline head

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад +2

      TFSR is not quite cleveland architecture but it has the rotated and valve angles modified, bests all of the inline heads as it always has. They make big power.

  • @ericdanielson1138
    @ericdanielson1138 Год назад +13

    With the given curve being the same. I will Say that each head did what its going to do with the Given test cam. The brain wants what the brain wants. So the max HP was accomplished with the head that liked the Cam, Intake and Header combo the best.

    • @edcurtis3375
      @edcurtis3375 Год назад +5

      With 62° of overlap at .050" - that camshaft is way off for this type of build.

    • @superkillr
      @superkillr Год назад +1

      @@edcurtis3375 So one of your super duper cams woulda changed how this whole test turned out?

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад

      @@edcurtis3375 Is this why it was well under 600 ft-lb for the torque? Normally a good built 408-427 ci will be 600 ft-lb or slightly greater.

    • @richdouche8253
      @richdouche8253 10 месяцев назад +1

      Overlap determines where the cam makes peak torque... With an engine spinning up near 7500 RPM, I agree, the overlap should have been at least > 70°.

  • @dennistate9951
    @dennistate9951 Год назад +1

    Great video

  • @GFPRACING
    @GFPRACING Год назад +2

    I Would Like to See You Teas the Mbe SBF Heads & Intake ! . & The CHI SBF Heads & Intake

  • @forcedinduction5245
    @forcedinduction5245 Год назад +2

    JK heads had the best intake to exhaust ratio. Which if you dig real deep has the best HP potential. And I think making the cr equal would have came out on top.

  • @RoB_666_
    @RoB_666_ Год назад +11

    Would've loved to have seen what it made using a set of ol' skool pro stock hi-port Cleveland heads or a set of C3 or earlier Yates heads.

    • @elmerfudpucker3204
      @elmerfudpucker3204 Год назад +3

      That is a whole different ball game. Those Cleveland style heads rock.

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад +2

      Power potential from highest to lowest:
      DOHC
      Hemi
      Rotated valves with Cant ( TW for example )
      Inline heads ( small angle 12 degrees for example )
      Inline heads ( large angle 23 degrees for example ).
      A Hemi is the best two valve head you can get before you go over to DOHC. Rotated and canted valves are a BIG deal compared to an inline head. The TW heads were smoking the inline heads back in the days on the fords with an increase in mid range torque and top end power on the same combos.

  • @alltherpm
    @alltherpm Год назад +1

    Love my afr 220s & it shows

  • @jonharrah2583
    @jonharrah2583 Год назад +2

    Would love to see a heads shoot out for the gen III Hemi, I know the stock eagle heads flow really well but are there any aftermarket heads that are actually worth it? Or any company’s that do porting that’s worth it?

  • @jeffmalone1502
    @jeffmalone1502 11 месяцев назад +2

    I’d like to see the hp difference if the used C&C ported Yates C3 head

  • @dustinkeim179
    @dustinkeim179 Год назад +2

    Only one way to know for sure sounds like a header shoot out 😎, Richard get a ford 6.8 v10 in there and do a turbo Big Bang please

  • @garykarenmcgruther6386
    @garykarenmcgruther6386 Год назад +6

    Here is a test for that combo, Higgins cylinder heads, CHI, Brodix o Neal , Hammer head hemi head's. All ported.

    • @danielwilson6665
      @danielwilson6665 Год назад +1

      Garykaren, I’m also a firm believer in the canted valve Cleveland type heads that you mentioned. In nearly all of those configurations, they will have better flow on the bench, have better results on the dyno and perform better in the real world known as the drag strip.
      Using Pro Stock as an example, I don’t recall an inline valve SBF (Windsor) combination ever winning a Pro Stock Championship like the modified high port iron Clevelands did numerous times before being phased out by the 500 cubic inch requirement.
      The Australian made Higgins Cleveland heads are awesome performers along with the Hammerhead SBF Hemi Heads. But the high cost would probably prevent them from being included in a modern comparison test such as this one done by Richard.
      I think Greg Brown’s Hammerhead SBF Hemi Head package is actually a pretty good deal. In addition to the amazing heads, the package includes a state of the art Jesel rocker arm system, the required valve covers which look like Boss 429 covers and the rest of the name brand components needed to use the heads on any Windsor or Cleveland block. The available Cleveland intakes are limited but I don’t see that as a problem.
      Hammerheads come with premium 2.20” intake and 1.650” exhaust valves. As cast they will flow 392 cfm intake and 275 exhaust. Typical ported flow is 462 cfm intake and 320 exhaust.
      In June 2017, Greg did some dyno testing at Charlie Peppers shop with promising results from his new heads. The 427 combo used stock sized valves, a Man ‘O War Windsor block, a 1250 cfm Dominator carb, a cam with 281*/297* duration @ .050” lift and 14.8:1 compression. The results were 966 hp @ 7700 / 674 tq @ 6000 rpms. Pretty good numbers but the dyno data indicated that a larger carburetor was needed. A better intake manifold like the CHI would have probably picked up an additional 30-40 horsepower.
      But that testing was done 5 years ago. I’m sure that more recent test results would be considerably better !
      The Higgins Heads and intake manifold can be seen on RUclips in a dyno video posted by FullBOOST. It’s a 461” Clevor street engine built by Dandy Engines Inc. in Melbourne, Australia. Using a single four barrel carb, 13:1 compression and running Aussie pump fuel it produced 934 hp and 669 tq.
      Running race fuel it produced 979 hp and 700 tq.
      There are some great Windsor type heads available. But I think the aftermarket Cleveland heads have a slight advantage. Just my opinion. Others will surely differ 🏁👍.

    • @garykarenmcgruther6386
      @garykarenmcgruther6386 Год назад +1

      @@danielwilson6665 I agree, ever since 5 years ago, the typical numbers has climbed. As for intake manifold's. That depends who ports them for sure. I would love to see Darin Morgan from BES port all the tested heads and intakes. But run a big bore 427 stroker Ford 4.125" bore to 4.000" stroke. That would be very very interesting to see. Allow the heads to breath and the power numbers climb.

    • @danielwilson6665
      @danielwilson6665 Год назад +1

      @@garykarenmcgruther6386 … I’ve seen some fine examples of Darin Morgan’s work and I agree that he is one of the best in the business. Canted valve Ford heads work quiet well with increased displacement 🏁

  • @TheSlim93gt
    @TheSlim93gt Год назад +1

    I would like to see some carb spacer testing, a ported intake, and bigger headers.
    Also change the color of the lines on your dyno sheet. Sometimes the curves are hard to tell apart and a little contrast would be nice.

  • @jasonreed9429
    @jasonreed9429 Год назад +6

    EVERYTHING YOU POST IS INVALUABLE TO THOSE BUYING PARTS ON A BUDGET, OR TUNING N TRYING NOT TO GRENADE PARTS, THANK YOU! ONE QUICK QUESTION, ARE WE GOING TO SEE THE REST OF "THE OTHER GUYS" ANYTIME SOON, MY INTRESTS ARE 292 CHEVY, 300 FOED INLINES, AND 455 BUICK,THANKS FOR YOUR TIME!

  • @JohnThomas-vb9se
    @JohnThomas-vb9se Год назад +9

    My flat top 393 made 626hp on a super flow with the later p-38’s. 60cc chambers. So around the same compression. I’d say it was valve train issues. Smaller camshaft too. In the 250’ duration and right at .700 lift.

    • @exploranator
      @exploranator Год назад +2

      When power suddenly dips at a higher RPM, that says, "valve float."

    • @superkillr
      @superkillr Год назад

      JON KAASE set them up guys.. he knew the specs before he sent them and confirmed they shoulda been fine. So I guess Kaase can't setup his own heads. Thanks internet guy!!!!!!!!

    • @JohnThomas-vb9se
      @JohnThomas-vb9se Год назад +3

      @@superkillr maybe I’ve not seen it in the video, but I don’t think he made mention of Kaase sending him the heads personally or setting them up. Those heads were designed by Jon and sold thru Jegs. I’m old enough to remember that. I’m sure they had springs for a solid roller, but not all solid rollers are equal. I have one here that only requires 650 open, and I have another that wants 900 over the nose. I also new someone who had a set and ran very deep in the 6’s in the 1/8 mile with a 347 in a fox mustang N/A. It’s almost certainly valve train issues and valve float. I’ve spun mine 7600 with Manley Nextek springs and not a sign of valve float.

    • @jamesth0mas891
      @jamesth0mas891 Год назад

      I have the p38s

    • @maximusvonce1381
      @maximusvonce1381 8 месяцев назад

      Yea but what did it make at the wheel behind a big stalled th400. Probably under 500wheel but faster than any stick.

  • @deanharris7149
    @deanharris7149 Год назад +1

    Wish I could like this a dozen times

  • @dennisrobinson8008
    @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад +1

    Hi. I was curious which camshaft was used? Also we would've expected to see 600ft-lb or greater out of this sweet 427 ci. Was this test also not using the collector extensions? ( in another test you did, collector extensions were critical and worth 50 ft-lb )

  • @russelljackson7034
    @russelljackson7034 10 месяцев назад +1

    Right on

  • @reevinriggin3570
    @reevinriggin3570 Год назад +5

    I would use a CHI head and make a dart block, big bore 427 clevor if I wanted to make power. I know you asked what I would use for the windsor, so I guess if I am to be hamstringed by that requirement it would have to be a twisted wedge offering.

    • @Greenskies321
      @Greenskies321 Год назад +3

      Same. Cleveland-style heads on windsors is superior to normal Windsor heads

  • @joeldubose5762
    @joeldubose5762 Год назад +4

    The twisted wedge heads have a inherit exhaust gain on a running engine over a std wedge head because of the relationship of the exh to the intake port in the chamber. That's the only head tested that would show as "Better" with the small header in your test. All of the inline valve heads would be similar with the only variable being flow and exit location of the exit of the port on the flange.

  • @parrot69777
    @parrot69777 Год назад +2

    Been doing this for 30 years. All my customers want their biggest bang for their buck....as cheap as possible. Ford and chevrolet. Wish you would do a video on this with a stock convertor and even stock exhaust manifolds. I have a pretty good idea but would like you input.

  • @briancrosby6895
    @briancrosby6895 11 месяцев назад +1

    I would go TFS. AFR is good also....I just prefer to be different. I think the headers were fine.... because they are more common as to most people having those rather than the bigger sizes as far as street cars

  • @DBSSTEELER
    @DBSSTEELER Год назад +1

    I really wish you had the resources to redo this test with all the best modern stuff. Would be an interesting things to see and I’m not even a Ford guy.

  • @keithparks107
    @keithparks107 Год назад +2

    I wonder if a step header would have done better . 1 3/4 ,to 17/8 .
    What would a race merge collectors do to these combos?
    It looks like cams need to be matched to heads for optimal results .
    Tfs r ones seem to be a really product !

  • @tedgay8427
    @tedgay8427 Год назад +1

    I've always wondered about the Kaase heads because they were such a different design. Oh well...

  • @Ken19700
    @Ken19700 Год назад +3

    Each set of heads needs it's own cam dialed in specifically for its flow numbers and desired rpm. If you want any engine with a 4 inch stroke to survive for any length of time it should max out at 6500 rpm.

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  Год назад +1

      no

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 7 месяцев назад

      There are much lighter and stronger parts now days, so the rpm limits made 50 years ago don't apply. The limits are higher due to better technology.

    • @Ken19700
      @Ken19700 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@dennisrobinson8008 No, piston speed determines longevity in modern engines too.

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 7 месяцев назад

      @@Ken19700 the parts are lighter hence less inertia.

    • @Ken19700
      @Ken19700 7 месяцев назад

      @@dennisrobinson8008 Lighter parts will exit the oil pan just as easily when you push them too far. For survivability you don't want an engine to exceed a piston speed of 4500 feet per minute. The math you use is (4500 X 6)÷Stroke gives you your max safe rpm. If you want your engine to last forever cut it back to 4000 feet per minute. You can build engines built for faster piston speeds but you're going to have to rebuild them far more often. Generally it's only for dedicated race engines.

  • @elmerfudpucker3204
    @elmerfudpucker3204 Год назад +7

    Two takeaways for me, one is the headers were used on all of the heads, and if they restricted any more than others in any measurable degree, it would have shown up in the tests. Like you said, if the lower HP versions were that restricted, they would have made at least as much as the TFS heads.
    Second takeaway is that even though this is an old test, I still believe in those bread and butter AFR heads. I build quite a few Windsor street/strip engines and have used a bunch of those, and I have always had great performance and reliability with them. When you get up into the price per performance debates, AFR heads win every time for me.

  • @shawnsparkman7916
    @shawnsparkman7916 7 месяцев назад +1

    Maybe a series of runs with 2 inch headers with a 3 inch collector? Idea of clearing the exhaust a bit faster? Numbers will change somewhat.

  • @keepondreaming3870
    @keepondreaming3870 Год назад +1

    I have a set of tf high ports CNC ported 240cc , what size were the high ports heads you tested?
    Mine flow a tad better, 355 Cfm

  • @patrickterry779
    @patrickterry779 Год назад +1

    I am running a 411ci iron headed Cleavor that dynos at 770hp NA. I hear a lot of Windsor folks that want a cleavor setup. Can you do a video comparison between Windsor aftermarket and Cleveland 4Vs?

  • @mylanmiller9656
    @mylanmiller9656 2 дня назад +1

    i think the best head would fair better with bigger headers. The TFS R heads would have opened the gap.

  • @hondatech5000
    @hondatech5000 Год назад +1

    Big single plane, more cam, 15:1, e85 and Hammerheads on sbf. Would be great apples to oranges test.

  • @pjm582009
    @pjm582009 Год назад +5

    Seems imo the headers held them back some. My 427 is very similar, 12-1, solid roller in the 700s, super vic intake, 1070 carb, afr 225, but with 1 7/8in headers made 675hp and 585lbft.

  • @keithmceuen8775
    @keithmceuen8775 Год назад +3

    I would have liked to have seen some Yates heads just like if you do a small block Chevy I want to see sb2 heads

  • @tomhamilton9140
    @tomhamilton9140 Год назад +6

    Thank God more ford stuff. 🙏

  • @johnsheetz6639
    @johnsheetz6639 Год назад +2

    Just from what I've seen on a lot of dyno tests AFR for Chevy, TFS for Ford.

  • @craphittingthefan2360
    @craphittingthefan2360 Год назад +4

    Yes Richard you did kill the power on the larger ported heads, AFR recommends 1-7/8" headers on there 225 heads but in order to get consistent testing using the 1-3/4 headers, I just wish you started with 1-7/8" on all products.

    • @Bacongrease00
      @Bacongrease00 5 месяцев назад

      But how much? 10hp? 15hp? 25hp?

  • @mikes.1882
    @mikes.1882 5 месяцев назад

    I have to wonder what the numbers would be with stock steel 4v close chamber heads on that 427 combo?
    Lykins did a 351c stock 4v close chamber FT 11:1 dyno 614.82 @7500
    After further review, the above heads outflow the stock 4v intakes by about 50cfm. Intake port 225 design beats stock larger ports.
    This is good info to know.
    Thanks Richard

  • @natricjol
    @natricjol Год назад +1

    before even getting into the whole video, seeing the tfs r heads made me excited. found mine in a storage unit the other day and now i need to figure out what to put them on. but lets talk old though. have had them for nearly 25 years now.
    the capt i work with wants to buy them and keeps offering money.

    • @SKAZ427
      @SKAZ427 Год назад +1

      I bought a set of R heads the first year they came out!!still have them and just had them cnc'd by BES...stock port location and flow in the 370 range at .700

  • @davidwoolard7571
    @davidwoolard7571 Год назад +2

    Man! I'd loved to have heard that Ford making it's dyno pulls! I'd probably have fainted

  • @JimmieBuffet-qi3lk
    @JimmieBuffet-qi3lk Год назад +1

    1 3/4 Header would work good on this combo and possibly make a little more torque in the process. 😊✌️

  • @jeffevans1534
    @jeffevans1534 Год назад +1

    I would have liked to see the Kasse heads milled down(angle?) to 57cc chambers with some bigger headers. I think they may have given up on the top end more than the others with the comparatively small headers. I'm making that hypothesis on the grounds of the greater departure from conventional Windsor valve layout. I think the compression difference may have made them a real winner as far as torque under the curve too.

    • @RyTrapp0
      @RyTrapp0 Год назад

      I really love the Kaase heads - but, today, the inline stuff is some of the baddest SBF stuff available. For example, these old school High Ports don't represent what today's High Ports are capable of(presumably, these are the older HPs before Brian Tooley revised them during his time at TFS), as the modern stuff tends to beat out any of the Twisted Wedge offerings, especially with modern porting programs from places like TEA. Or Eddy SC1s, still one of the best SBF heads, and another inline piece. So I gotta disagree with the "moving further from Windsor architecture" theory, that was true in the past before we got heavier development in the SBF world(Twisted Wedges are one of the OG EFI era aftermarket SBF heads, and their capabilities & popularity probably initially slowed development of the inlines). But, today, it's damn hard to beat the modern inline stuff, you have to go with some pretty serious canted valve pieces to surpass them. Not to mention, inlines have better valve geometry in Windsors(lifter placement) too, which helps get the most out of them up top.

    • @superkillr
      @superkillr Год назад

      nothing you are talking about has anything to do with one another. Might as well had Richard run different valve cover breathers as well.

  • @jmflournoy386
    @jmflournoy386 4 месяца назад

    Is there an update using the Boss9 style and Clevor style heads? customer wants to build (me to spec) a stroker ford cheers low and mid range not max at max rpm, most likely a supercharger/ intercooler style aftrermarket block

  • @dannytravis7118
    @dannytravis7118 Год назад +3

    I think all else remaining the same I think the test would have came out in favor of the best heads you used. I think although header size would have helped all of them the more powerful heads would probably have seen more gain because they would make the most of the improvement

  • @shawnsparkman7916
    @shawnsparkman7916 7 месяцев назад +1

    With the cam used, was the engine running lumpy at idle? Or did it have good manners and run smooth?

  • @justingarewal
    @justingarewal Год назад +1

    Did you talk Kaase about it? I’d be curious to see what he would say about it. Maybe those heads like some weird split duration or something. Not that it invalidates the test but it would be an interesting conversation.

  • @Bacongrease00
    @Bacongrease00 5 месяцев назад +1

    AFR has always been be recommendation for an out of the box high performing in line head. I will admit the TFS heads seem to edge out the AFRs performance wise just due to the architecture. New build with new pistons go TFS existing engine stick with a 20 degree inline AFR head.

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  5 месяцев назад +1

      pick whatever head you want from the supplied data-the 11R heads work very well

  • @azlandpilotcar4450
    @azlandpilotcar4450 Год назад +1

    Why should we guess? Re-run a test with a similar head and block, then alter the header size. Didn't Engine masters do that comparison? Your test was a good enough baseline for comparison.

  • @jerrellkull5347
    @jerrellkull5347 11 месяцев назад +1

    I wonder how much more power a canted valve, or hemi canted valve head would make?

  • @68nitrostang
    @68nitrostang Год назад +2

    The entire combination with 1 3/4 header vs 2.0 or 1 7/8
    Running airspeed through the motor can be tuned with intake manifold and header sizes
    I’ve run many combinations on pipe max and had headers built to pipe max specs and done very well
    Performance trends engine pro 3.9 can be used to show engine running air speeds
    If the combo is close to choke the small header makes it worse that’s when the larger tube slowed running air speed through entire intake tract and allowed more hp and rpm to be obtained

    • @sstevocamaro
      @sstevocamaro Год назад

      I would like that program, is it free?

    • @superkillr
      @superkillr Год назад

      @@sstevocamaro No but it's worth it.

    • @superkillr
      @superkillr Год назад

      So what you're saying in all the text is the test would show the same order as it sits now?

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад

      They did this test on Chevy LS on engine sizes from 6.0 to 427 ci, power levels from 550-700 HP and the 1 7/8" header wins. It's 20-30HP peak over the 1 3/4" and no loss in torque. The 2" header loses torque below 4000 RPM and doesn't make more peak power than the 1 7/8"...

  • @johnsheetz6639
    @johnsheetz6639 2 месяца назад +1

    From the water test I've seen it always seemed like the trick flow heads are the best for Ford. Chevy guys like those afrs.

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  2 месяца назад

      water tests?

    • @johnsheetz6639
      @johnsheetz6639 Месяц назад

      ​@@richardholdener1727sorry I meant to say from the tests I've seen. I was using the spell check microphone.

  • @ogod3589
    @ogod3589 Год назад +4

    I got the Kaase/Jegs on a 347 stroker and pulled 618 at 6500

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад

      Sweet. 618 HP at a LOW 6500 RPM. The peak torque must've been high! Peak torque on good built 347-355 cubic inch gets over 500ft-lb, sometimes to 525 ft-lb even...

  • @jerrynead7680
    @jerrynead7680 Год назад +6

    I know with the different canted vavles and other things that would have made things need to parts change. It would have been very interesting to see how the CHI 3V' heads would have competed against the best normal Windsor heads.

    • @forcedinduction5245
      @forcedinduction5245 Год назад +2

      Yes the Aussie heads. Make big power. Like a Yates C3 head. I've seen a 454ci sbf make 920hp n/a with those heads. Upwards of 8500rpm. Even the TFS won't make the power the 3v or C3 heads will make. They can flow close to the same numbers but fall short in power

    • @RadDadisRad
      @RadDadisRad Год назад +1

      @@forcedinduction5245 I just saw a SBF mustang with some Yates D3 heads making almost 1,100hp on just fuel. It was on the Revan Evan channel. Also if you search RUclips for “how to build horsepower” you’ll find 2 more Ford small blocks in the 800hp+ range on just fuel.

    • @forcedinduction5245
      @forcedinduction5245 Год назад +1

      @@RadDadisRad yeah they make big power. A friend of mine did a boss 351 that was 383 inches with a sheet metal intake/one big 4bbl a ton of compression and a solid roller that had more than 300 degrees @.050. I don't know the dyno #s but with the iron heads it was making power over 9000 rpm. In a 3400 lb car and a C4 it went 9.83. I've heard they can move over 340 cfm on the intake side.

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад

      3V's are used in 600-1000HP combos... They rock, however to test you would've need a different short block because the piston reliefs would be setup differently.

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад

      @@forcedinduction5245 Cleveland 4V heads rock. I was around for the original 5.0 days 87-93. The stereotype in the day was the 4V's were too "big", no velocity, etc. No one pointed out that it takes a ported TFSR to match a ported cleveland head. The 4V cleveland head makes 275cfm@.600" without being touched and 310CFM@.600" with just a good valve job and 290CFM@.500", with bowl work and a good exhaust job they make over 300CFM@.500" and over 315CFM@.600". WIth extensive port modification and filling in the floors from 340-370CFM on the intake side. It's amazing we didn't take that architecture much more seriously in the 5.0 days, it was superior. As good as you can get before going to Yates. The CHI 3V is basically an updated and corrected modern day canted valve "Cleveland" head. They make huge power. They are used in 600-1000HP N/A combos.

  • @jarvusryes4565
    @jarvusryes4565 Год назад +1

    Great content. Ever test Brodix Headhunters on a SBF?

  • @kblackav8or
    @kblackav8or Год назад +1

    Now for the canted valve heads. Brodix Neal, Blue Thunder, SVO C302B, etc. 2.75 crank main block.

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  Год назад

      those were going to be next-but dedicated race engine builds were beyond the scope of the original test

    • @kblackav8or
      @kblackav8or Год назад +1

      @@richardholdener1727 In 2001 I bought my 1971 Mustang and over the past 21 years I scrounged up a pair of never built or ported C3 marked C302B heads, had "Scott the Mad Porter" who is fairly well known in the BBF crowd port and build them up. They are flowing 335 on the intake side at .600 lift. I also scrounged a old NOS G351 SVO block and one of the last SVO forged cranks for it. Scat 6.0 rods in Chevy dimensions, zero balanced the crank (shop near San Diego that built trophy truck Ford engines). I basically took what Roush was doing in the late 80s with the Trans Am/GTO engines and scaled it back, 10.5 compression, smaller roller cam but built to 351 dimensions. It hasn't been dynoed but the parts combo should have me well up into the 500s if not more. It's my 351X.. it's not really a cleveland or a windsor, best of both. It was super touring car before the term was coined.

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад

      Good info

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад

      @@kblackav8or You can do all the way to 12:1 with aluminum heads on 93 octane, and there is also E85, which would allow all the way to 15:1 or so.

  • @NewEngland462
    @NewEngland462 6 месяцев назад +1

    Id like to see a trick flow r head and high port combo from tfs that would be nasty canted valve high port

  • @georgepaust8416
    @georgepaust8416 Год назад +2

    One of the many things I learned building big block motors back in the late sixties and early seventies was that you got to have the right header size. It may be a 427 small block, but it's running big block proportions. You got to go 2 in headers at least. I'm almost willing to bet that the smaller headers cause that power drop at the upper RPM range on the one test... Back pressure.

    • @exploranator
      @exploranator Год назад

      It would be interesting to see the tests with 2" headers, if you are truly fond of discarding low-speed drivability.

  • @68nitrostang
    @68nitrostang Год назад +2

    Take total valve lift minus lash
    Assume no deflection of push rod
    Look at 65% of cam lift after lash . .739 -.016 = .723 lift x .65
    .46995 lift .470 . Look at flow numbers of each head at .470 lift ( this is the constant cfm that feeds the motor
    The closer this number is to meeting piston cfm demand
    The more power the motor will make

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад

      Excellent Data. Eric Weingartner measured actual "deflection" and it is around 5% in most cases. So what he does to overcome it is run cam lobes a little bit larger than his intended actual cam duration and degree requirements required for a specific output.

  • @FairladyS130
    @FairladyS130 6 месяцев назад +1

    No fair, this lot was run to 7500 rpm, presumably because of higher spec valve springs. Be interesting to see that a standard stroke would run to and it's power with these heads, cams, etc.

  • @thisislargemouth5566
    @thisislargemouth5566 Год назад +2

    Hey Richard! Quick question, I know you used to do a lot of Honda things in your day, I was just curious if you have ever messed with the Mazda stuff? Particularly the MZR DISI engines from the mazdaspeed 3/6.

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  Год назад +1

      ONLY AN INTERCOOLER UPGRADE ON THE 3

    • @thisislargemouth5566
      @thisislargemouth5566 Год назад

      @@richardholdener1727 Nice! Thanks for the speedy reply (get it?) Lol. I just picked up my second generation speed 3 and there's just no way I can leave it stock. 🤷‍♂️ Lol

  • @TomSmith-cv8hk
    @TomSmith-cv8hk 6 месяцев назад +1

    I'd love to see the actual valve lift at the valve, especially with the Kaase's, thinking their could be some lost ratio and the Kaase's use a different pushrod length to boot.

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  6 месяцев назад

      pushrod length doesn't change valve lift

    • @TomSmith-cv8hk
      @TomSmith-cv8hk 6 месяцев назад

      Except when you combine that pushrod length change with a rocker fulcrum height change or if adjustable pushrod cups in the rocker like Jessels, changes the rate of opening the lift and the full open time.. ruclips.net/video/5lgEAMuZBdo/видео.html@@richardholdener1727

  • @richardwalker379
    @richardwalker379 Год назад +1

    I have a 370 CI Dart with 195cc AFR heads. Comp cam XFI236HR-14. The manifold was an old Wieand EFI tunnel Ram base with a custom plenum and a 75mm T/B I origanally had fitted and was match ported to the heads.
    I have since changed to a Edelbrock Victor EFI manifold, part #29285 This manifold has larger ports than the heads. I would like to see a test showing this and what effect it has on the tune and power out put. Question, should I pull the heads and port match or just fit bigger heads?
    The only thihg changed was the manifold and to a 1000cfm Holley Throtle body.

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  Год назад +1

      the port match is not critical-your intake changes makes a much bigger difference

  • @jamesroberts807
    @jamesroberts807 Год назад +1

    On header question I GUESS we will never know unless you test it Richard 😆 🤣 lol

  • @ryandoyle4344
    @ryandoyle4344 Год назад +1

    Kaase heads valve-train support 800 lift cam?

  • @matthewnosal6893
    @matthewnosal6893 Год назад +2

    Trick Flow 225 Cleveland head makes what 650 hp at 10.5-1 comp ratio with significantly smaller hydro roller cam on a 427…..? In their literature. Are those heads really that good?

  • @toneitdown2
    @toneitdown2 Год назад +2

    The Kaase/Jegs. Are these the Kaase P-38?

  • @bing4332
    @bing4332 Год назад +2

    ALL YOUR Ford stuff from 20 years ago?

  • @Spad68
    @Spad68 Год назад +1

    I believe the hearts would of helped some the head a little but would of helped other heads Allot .
    I don't think the average difference would of changed much other them all being higher due to header size.

  • @jfer3358
    @jfer3358 Год назад +1

    Hey Richard when assembling a 1984 351w is it important to put the fuel pump eccentric back into the engine?

  • @Descatane63079
    @Descatane63079 Год назад +2

    I think all including the benchmark heads were held back but I think you needed to correct the issue with kasse/jegs heads and run it again

    • @superkillr
      @superkillr Год назад

      I think maybe you can do the test and give us the info for free.. that way we know it was done right

  • @jasaircraft
    @jasaircraft Год назад +1

    Hello is it normal that the Trickflow people dont answer emails?
    Im asking them which piston set to buy for a 1995 sbf 302 with their 190 66cc heads and their 51403002 cam to keep as close as possible to stock CR which i believe is 9:1 (will be supercharged)

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  Год назад +2

      you can do that math yourself. go to Wallace racing compression calculator on line

  • @2camsam
    @2camsam Год назад +4

    I wonder what the modern trick flow 11r heads would do on this test?

  • @cesar101387
    @cesar101387 4 месяца назад +1

    What’s the part number on the TFS heads?

  • @TWS8193
    @TWS8193 Год назад +1

    What's the difference in $ between the brands?

  • @dallascowboys1683
    @dallascowboys1683 Год назад +1

    Thank you Richard for the great video. I do miss watching “Pinks” Didn’t the Fords dominate Pinks in 2010.

  • @josephtravers777
    @josephtravers777 Год назад +1

    Richard, is timing and carb jetting constant during these type tests or are they optimized for individual brands? Thanks for all of the SBF data 👍

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  Год назад +1

      we tune each combo-most often they want the same af and timing

  • @twinturbotony93
    @twinturbotony93 Год назад +1

    Have you ever tested pro-filer heads made in New carslile, Ohio? I've considered trying them for my small block Ford.

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  Год назад

      I HAVE NOT-THEIR BBC HEADS ARE GOOD

    • @twinturbotony93
      @twinturbotony93 Год назад

      @@richardholdener1727 ok, thanks. They seem to have a good ford head too.

  • @johnb7430
    @johnb7430 Год назад +3

    Potentially... if you look at the EXHAUST flow of each, the "restriction" of smaller headers would have impacted the heads with more flow the most.
    But... pure idle speculation. The quality of air flow is different than the bulk amount of air as the power observed didn't scale by flow bench max.

    • @dennisrobinson8008
      @dennisrobinson8008 Год назад

      They've done these 1 3/4", 1 7/8" and 2" tests on the LS land in 550-700 HP N/A engine combos and the 1 7/8" win out handily. It might be 20-30HP peak and gains across the curve. The 2" loses at the bottom and isn't worth much at the top. So they have settled on 1 7/8" headers on those 6.0L to 427 ci applications in their world.

  • @johnnymula2305
    @johnnymula2305 4 месяца назад +1

    I just received my Trick Flow Twisted Wedge 11R top end kit with 170cc heads.
    Im wanting to purchase a 347 Stroker kit now that the Block is back from the Machine shop (.030 over).
    The motors a 99 Explorer roller. Its going into an 86 Bronco.
    Recommendations on which (Balanced) stroker should i be looking into? Wanting to run pump gas. 91 is highest rating here in AZ.

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  4 месяца назад +1

      scat has good stuff

    • @johnnymula2305
      @johnnymula2305 4 месяца назад

      @@richardholdener1727 Thank you sir!
      I do like their reputation. Just had to get a a validation from “the man” 👍🏻

  • @forcedinduction5245
    @forcedinduction5245 Год назад +1

    The header size I don't think mattered. In that with that many cubic inches all the heads were choked. So over all the number maybe low but low for all. I think where the test could have been more equal is in the CR. And that is almost impossible to do. Because it would either involve massaging the top of the pistons. Or the chambers. And as soon as you touch the chamber it's not a cnc. Ported head. It's a cnc ported head with the cc reworked. So you did about all you could to evaluate the heads in a comparo. Maybe you could have done the hp. And torque under the curve like you have done before where the max number isn't as important as the total from rpm to rpm and if max power was @6700 rpm what was it at. 5700 for all of them and 4500 and so on. Some heads loan them selves to more power over 7500 vs some heads making the most at 6800 but make 40 more at 5400 vs the other. And are there no C3 yates heads out there that can use a nascar intake. ? Don't the C3's flow more than a tfs R ?

  • @brendavanorden9550
    @brendavanorden9550 Год назад +1

    Her's how you get a good set of heads for the best $$$. Buy the TFS H.P. 192 as cast. Send them to Duane Busch for porting. I think you will be surprised on the savings. You will have a hair over 2k in a 3.5k set of heads.

    • @keithswiercz3890
      @keithswiercz3890 Год назад

      I have a set of aluminum smog 192s from the 90s basically brand new. Would these be better on a 363 or 427? Where is Duane located and how long is the turn around time? Ty

  • @Russell_and_Rosko
    @Russell_and_Rosko Год назад +2

    Can I get your thoughts on your favorite boost cams?

    • @Nate-oh1wg
      @Nate-oh1wg Год назад +3

      I’m not sure if this is a sarcasm post lol… if not, You should look through his past camshaft vids and the relationship behind cams and boost and it’ll probably allow you to make a solid decision. Richard is a great teacher

  • @filthydlo69
    @filthydlo69 Год назад +1

    What would you have to do to add boost? Can you add anything with compression that high?