This is a great engine family. The B and RB engines were very reliable, and they had good power output for their displacement. They powered some legendary cars.
All of the Virginia State Police cars used on Interstates during the late 1960s and early 1970s were lower-end Plymouth Furies (Fury I?) with 440 "Super Commando" V-8s. The cars had numerically low rear-end ratios that supposedly gave the cars top speeds of 140 MPH.
The minor confusion about whether these engines ended in 1978 or 79 is likely because Chrysler filled warehouses with these in 1978 for use in the following year. The Trenton engine plant had the B series tooling removed to make room for newer engines for small cars. Those engines would be the A452 (2.2 liter ) and other variations like the never -built A453, which was a 3 valve version of the 2.2 liter engine. I worked in Chrysler engine development engineering until late 1979. I am enjoying your videos.
Thank you so much for sharing that insight =) Did you get to meet any big names like Virgil exner Elwood engle? I know they are designers Glad you dig this channel =)
Great episode as always. It IS difficult to keep all this straight, the cross over in CI adds to it. Well presented! WYR: 1970 Challenger (440 6 Pack please), 1960 Imperial Crown. Thanks as always ~ Chuck
I wanted this episode to come out yesterday, but I couldn’t figure out with a 383. I had some conflicting information about the B engine once or said that it was only made for one year and I was like we were the other 383 come from because they made 3 million of them. lol A couple weeks back I really wanted to do an engine episode on the early general motors V8 that were made by Northway .. I believe that’s the name of the manufacture. They also did the Cole V8 it would be the Cadillac, V8, Oakland, V8 and the Viking V8 but information on some of those are really hard to come by on the Internet so that one kind of got placed on the shelf the Viking V8 is an interesting piece of machinery. The valves are horizontal instead of vertical… one day Also, not sure if they should all get their own individual engine episode or they should all be grouped together because of some similarities also from the same brand GM Great choices =) glad you dig this one
@@What.its.like. that’s the level of effort that you put into this that is so greatly appreciated by all of us! Regarding the engines, just a thought… Individual episodes, and then a separate episode on the similarities. It could show the evolution within general motors as well. Once again, thanks for everything you do.
It sure was a radical change in engineering direction going from 392's to the B / RB series. I would imagine that 1959 was a frantic year operating the new engine plants and ramping down the old production lines . I read that Ed Donovan inquired about purchasing the drawings for the 392 in 1960 , he was told that nothing was saved , all gone. It took him 10 more years but eventually he did make his own ( 417 Donovan ). The RB block is much heavier than the block of a 392. The 392 and 413 ( 1959 ) actually weigh about the same . The B-RB block is an incredible piece of engineering without a doubt. Imagine if they had went with more of a Poly head design .
WYR the Challenger is such a classic that it was used as a styling base for the new ones. The Jensen FF was an English product not much seen here, but highly revered there. The Chrysler 300 cars were in the same vein of luxury tied with high performance. Tough choice but I'll go with the Jensen for it's conversation-starting obscurity. The later Mopar cars were more interchangeable than many realize, and the "K-frame" and torsion bars could be swapped to allow "A" to "B" (or backwards) engine changes, so this happened rather frequently allowing poorer hot rodders to buy a cheaper small-engine "A" car, then go to the junkyard and grab the "B" parts for a hop-up on a budget afterwards. Collectors always need to check serial numbers and production codes to know a car isn't one of these. Sort of a 'modular' design long before 'modular' became popular. Nothing new under the sun so they say...
My dad lived in MI. Got married, and bought a '58 fury convert with the 350...he sold it within 2 years due to all the cracked windshields he had to replace. Something about the roads in Lansing...he then bought a beetle and drove it to CA. The folks back home thought, a fury to a beetle???
If you want big block power for your Mopar project but can't find an engine at a good price start scouting for abandoned motor homes. 413 wedges were in a lot of them until 79.
The later 413 in motorhomes was an "industrial" engine. It had very different heads and waterpump housing arrangements. The short block is the same though, and uses a fantastic forged steel crankshaft. Regular automotive heads, water pump housing, etc, all bolt right onto the Industrial 413 (and 361). By the mid 70's alot of motorhomes came with 440's with regular automotive accessories (not industrial). Early ones had a forged steel crank but most unfortunately came with a cast steel crank. Still good bones to build off of though.
I'm not a Mopar guy at all, but every Mopar with a 383 that I ever drove was a seriously fast car, including the land yacht New Yorkers. Fantastic engines. I also never liked the Beach Boys song where the FI Corvette beats a 413 Mopar. A 62 Dart with a 413 was an amazingly fast car. Finally, that Jensen in the photo is not an FF. FF stands for Ferguson Formula, an early AWD system. Jensen FFs had two of those vertical vent thingies between the door and the front wheel opening, and are extremely rare. (As an aside, there was a 66 Mustang built with a FF drive train. I've only seen pics of it). I had a customer in the mid 70's who had a regular Jensen Interceptor with 440 and it was very cool. He told me that he bought a house, and the car came with it! WYR: 70 Challenger and the Jensen, but that 63 300 is an absolutely beautiful car! As always, great info, and I learned a few things!
Did the Corvette win? I always thought the 413 won the race. Funny, you should mention that I got the opportunity to do both in a comparison episode, and I got so much flack for it, because evidently the beach boys were singing about a for 13 in a Dodge, but they say superstock in the song ram charger was Dodge superstock with Plymouth. I had a whole part explaining all of that at the end of the episode, but I decided to cut it out last minute. Thank you so much for the correction on the Jensen. I’ve never seen one, so I had no clue what it looked like. Sweet choices. Thank you so much for all the corrections and information. This was a hard engine episode to put together a lot harder than I thought it would be.
I believe that the 361 was also manufactured until 78 for medium duty trucks and one of the many Chrysler big block engines l had in various Chrysler vehicles was a 361 in a 64 Dodge Custom 880 four door hardtop it was a very dependable engine and l would like to have another one. Thanks for the video 👍😾
It’s quite possible there was tons of conflicting information with this one and some of the ending dates wasn’t as cut and dry as it is for a lot of other engine families
Yes it was. The 361 and 413 were used for Industrial applications up until the end of Big Block production. They were in Dodge medium duty trucks, as well as generators, water pumps, forklifts, etc...... Fantastic engines 👌
@@johneckert1365I have seen and bought some parts from a 413 marine engine - it had the corresponding water jackets and inclined intake manifold ( to keep the carburetor level while the boat's bow was planing up).
Yeah Chrysler and ford are hard to do I honestly think Chrysler is harder to do than Ford, because their engine line is all over the place and they different engine, families that have the same displacements
As a MOPAR guy that steeps himself in the history of all the encompassed brands, going all the way back to the year 1900 when brothers John and Horace Dodge fpunded rhe company, producing engines, frames and orher parts for automotive manufacturers -- I seriously appreciate this video and the depth you go into about these engines.
Thank you potato joe it means a lot =) I love doing these engine episodes I learn a lot as well like where all the engines come from and different families Question do you know anything about GM northway engines Cadillac Oakland, and Viking V8 If you know any information on those engines, could you email me? What_its_like@yahoo.com
59 Plymouth Fury 😱 all 9 yards of her 😂 Any time you put an American V8 in a British Auto !!!! Your in for Fun ☺️ !!!! Guaranteed..... Happy Motoring ✌️🤠
I have been waiting literally forever for you to have a 1963 or a 1964 Chrysler Newport, New Yorker or a 300. Very nice to see that 64 and hopefully you can find one for a full story on it in the future.
Mopar was killing it on the quarter mile track in the sixties. Factory race cars with big block engines, or A/FX big block/factory experimentals, were the hot ticket everybody wanted! Between Mopar, and Ford, they dominated everything! Now the price on one of those clone cars is just stupid! In my opinion the wedge engine run better than the hemi!
Great video! The 361 was available in Chrysler built cars up to 1966. I have one in my Charger. In '67 the 361 was gone for car production. The 413 was available through 1965.
Got a disassembled "U" code and it's RB 727 HD if needed by someone over ther. I'm too old and decrepit now to play around with that stuff anymore.@@bigblockjalopy
Great episode, Possibly 2 errors, I think the diagram at 2:00 is wrong, I don’t recall the B or RB heads ever crossing the pushrod and valves, only the HEMI. Two I believe the heads were interchangeable with the Road Runner 383 B block using the 440 RB heads and cam. A bit better breathing. (EDIT read the text at 12:42!!). I have a good many books and magazines on the subject. My family would win most B/RB conversations, between my father & I in model year order: 65 Polara convertible 383, 66 Chrysler 300 convertible 383 4bbl, 67 Monaco wagon 383, 68 Monaco sedan 383 (my first car), 68 Newport convertible 383, 69 Newport Custom 383, 72 Monaco 400, 75 New Yorker 440, 76 Dodge Power Wagon 440, max 5 at one time. I worked at a gas station, my boss also had a collection of 383s and 440s in his cars. He had a 426 max wedge but blew it up before we met.
I could not find an engine cut away for the B series engine. That’s why I left all that stuff up there because it said it was a 361 Dodge. Generally I would get rid of that… But I was looking at that diagram as well that cut away I should say, and there was two things that I didn’t like about that cut away the the pushrods as you stated, and it looks like the oil pump was inside the engine Thank you so much for pointing those out.
A slant 6, with a fabricated intake manifold, with air to water intercooler inside. Used to adapt a scavenger from a Detroit 4-71 diesel. With a 650 holley carb. Making about 0.5-1psi at idle, and 4-5 psi at 1000-1200 rpm about 15 psi at 2400 to 5500 rpm. With a ported head . It should really surprise people !
I was just watching power nation where they got 400 hp out of a turbo charged slant six I really want to build a Grand Prix race car it's one of my favorite five designs of all time but I wanna build my own and I'm thinking 6 cylinder power plant ( idk when this will ever come to light just something I want to do and have something no one else has) the slant six is a contender with big cam and triple webers is the way to go nothing sexier.. than seeing those trumpets when one opens the hood Also thought about a turbo flathead six those engines are cheap no one wants them and they sound great ruclips.net/video/oj-xkUBLLCQ/видео.htmlsi=YUIQLHM0E4s6KX2c
For those that don't know, that Jensen was a British car that ran a 440. I imagine it was pretty hard to keep rubber on the rear unless it was weighted down.
Awesome choices I’ve never seen a facial Vega or Jensen in person. Someone requested a facial Vega last year come to find out the only made 190-ish of them so that’s kind of a tall order. I’m sure I’ll get to it one day.
Hi Jay!: 'Ya know I love the engine episodes! I learn something new every time! I was familiar with all these engines, except for the 350 and 400. Somehow it escaped me that Chrysler Corp, Made those discpacements. WYR. . . .Hmmmmmm. . .going with Challenger on the first one, gonna' pick Jensen on the second, just too interesting!
I’ve been looking for one of those imperials it would be awesome to compare to a Cadillac of 59 Cadillac because everybody thinks the 59 Cadillac fins or the biggest fin. I think the imperial got them beat.
Operating on a circuit route carrying tourists or sightseers through Arlington National Cemetery there used to be bus like vehicles pulling trailer coaches at low speed. Not sure if they are still over there and if so the original ones. I think the tug which I remember as also carrying passengers was powered by a derated 440 powered by some compressed/liquefied gas such as propane or butane maybe some smaller version of the B/RB engine ? were some of the B/RB block engines lemons from the factory? When you got one of them that was put together right,and kept fed with good oil,coolant and gasoline that didn't detonate they seemed about indestructible. (Did some come with unusual coolant from the factory that needed to be completely flushed out before you added ordinary "green" drugstore prestone?) When these engines were in their heyday I think was also the time where a lot of bad oil that would varnish or sludge even when changed on schedule was being sold to the public. (Also a problem for everyone else' engines in that era)
Good video Jay this one is a complicated one to follow I’m sure it was hard to research, thanks mopar 😂, I have been researching the 75 400 and it appears to be a underrated diamond in the ruff. For the world you rather I’ll take the Vega gt and the Jensen as they are beautiful and very rare and powerful 👍
This was a really hard one to do. I think that’s why I’ve been putting the Chrysler engines on sort of the side burner. We still have to do the LA and the elephant hemi 426 I’m sure there’s another engine family in there somewhere
Absolutely! Too many people hate the 400 because it was a low power dog, but that's just because of emissions at the time. It's dimensions give it amazing potential! Huge bore and a short stroke make it a screamer! Even with the stock low compression pistons, some good heads and manifolds, along with a good cam make a great engine ❤
1:50 that's not a Wedge. Some incorrect info here. Some parts interchange between the 383 B and 383 RB. Heads, oiling system, exhaust manifolds, water pump hsg, fuel pump/ rod, camshaft. They are not completely different. And RB stands for raised block, not race block. These are the greatest, most reliable engines ever build. Esp. the B.
It said 361 Dodge, but it did not look like a wedge I could not find a wedge cut out It does say in the video that the RB is for raised block also discusses how the RB is 3/4 of an inch taller than the regular block
You took the words right out of my mouth. Besides the block, intake manifold, crank, pushrods, and pistons/rods, EVERYTHING else is interchangeable between the B and RB.
Not on the 383 you can’t use the pistons they are different as well as connecting rods and posh rods are also different it says nothing is interchangeable between the 383s might be able to use the heads
@@What.its.like. Nobody here said the pistons and rods interchange. Again, most of the parts interchange, except crank, rods, pistons, push rods, intake manifold and distributor. You can even run B intakes on RB engines with adapters, or RB distributors on B engines with an adapter. You can stroke the B using a RB crank. It is basically the same engine, just with a taller deck height and a smaller bore.
"Smitty" was one of my high school friends. He, like me, was a committed VW fan. I had an '85 Scirocco Turbo, and he had a beautiful brown '79 Scirocco with low miles that would be a collectors item today. In any case, he wrecked the Scirocco and needed a car and a neighbor down the street had a '66 Plymouth Fury convertible that he didn't want anymore so Smitty bought the thing for $800. It was a beater, but it was red, it was a convertible, it had glass packs and it sounded good. Wasn't that fast but it had good pickup. We were trying to figure out what was under the hood, and came to the conclusion that it was a 383. It must have been, because it ate gas like Trump eats McDonalds~ -We went out for a drive one day in Bedford Township, Michigan and some spud in a Ford Escort cut us off. It was really stupid what that guy did, especially since that Plymouth didn't have the great brakes that Volkswagens had. Smitty gets next to him at a light "Hey Wally? You want your ass beat or something?" He says to the willowy kid in the drivers seat of the Ford. Smitty was a fat pig, 6'2 and 225 pounds, but he looked like a football player and the bad driver in the Escort just stared ahead and tried to ignore us. Back to the Plymouth: When we were riding in this car, I noticed that whenever Smitty got on it [which was every single green light], I heard a loud thunk from the front end. When he had the hood open, I examined the motor mounts and I was aghast to see that the drivers side appeared to be resting not on the motor mount, but on the log exhaust manifold itself! "Uhmm...Smitty? Are you seeing this? I think the manifold is sitting on the frame rail...." "Hmm. Yeah, maybe. Ask me if I give a shit about this car" I just kind of shook my head. That car needed a TON of work but it would have been a perfect restoration project. Guess what? He wrecked that car too.... Great video!
Thank you so much for sharing that awesome story I had friends like Smitty that couldn’t keep cars for whatever reason anytime they saw an obstacle in front of them. They just slam on the gas and think the insurance company was gonna give them a new car… I knew a guy that could go through cars like they were water. He never had a good vehicle because he just had to keep on cars every couple months. I don’t know I don’t get people like that. I’m all for buying a really cheap car and seeing how long it will last for not buying a really cheap car and hitting the first thing that I see .. lol big difference
Rumors say It was demanded by Congress that Chrysler discontinue its Big Block V-8's in order to get the Federally Guaranteed Loans that Chrysler needed to get the K-Car into production. Otherwise, they would had kept them for their Trucks.
I never heard that, but it wouldn’t surprise me. Also, didn’t Dodge discontinue their D-Series trucks in ‘77, which most often were equipped with RB’s?
Really complicated to understand all the nuances of these engines did the RB 383 come and go while the lower deck 383 continued to be produced? I believe some of the higher compression versions of these had cross bolts into the main bearing caps and upgraded and/or intrinsically balanced crankshafts? Does the famous but seldom seen second generation Hemi share mostly the RB block structure?
This was a really hard engine family to do. the way I understand it is the B (low block and RB we’re built at the same time as one another the 383RB golden lion is only found in the Windsor and Saratoga from 1959 and 1960.. While the B was in every thing else..) what gets me is why go through that much trouble to offer the 383 why not just give them a 413 and say it’s a 383
@@What.its.like.yes, build at the same time. The RB 383 was Chrysler only and ONLY in the 1959/60 model year. Plymouth Dodge and Desoto got the Low Deck (which is the better engine).
In my humble opinion which won't buy you a cup of coffee anywhere. These were the best engines chrysler ever produced. Famed for power for the sleepers. The 361 fueled the hunger for more. If we had a 2000 pound machine to put it in allot of us would not be here. On which would we prefer 1970 cuda. Closer to the 2000 pound machine.
Everybody here that knows the movie would want Christine !! As a bonus, it would be nice to have a forever-young Alexandra Paul chained in the back seat …
@@What.its.like. Reading the comments below if you ever see a Facel or a Jensen in person especially the Jensen Interceptor you will love them, they have jaw dropping style, use to be a couple of interceptors running around Austin, and I saw a Facel 2 door at a car show in person and there is nothing like it, and I liked the styling so much, I didn't spend much time looking at the 65 Riveria next to it, and the 4 door Facel Vega looks so awesome to me it has the 57-58 Eldorado Brougham and the 61-69 Lincoln Continental beat, and with the same suicide door styling
I’m going to see if there’s anyway to cover one this year I would love to go to Hyman and cover some cars. He has a couple for sale. It’s just 8 1/2 hours away from here. Lol.
@@ColtonRMagby - You mean you don’t remember the cute-as-hell naked blonde gal riding the Honda 350 ?? That’s a high-point in the movie … I would have loved to be that Honda seat !!
Your statement concerning the 318 is woefully inaccurate. The 318 A motor is basically the same block as the LA block, the LA denoting different lightweight casting. Many many many parts interchange. So a little more research and clarify your mistake. People trying to learn do not need to be misled, but as I have said before, you're learning and getting better than when you started, but this mistake is decidedly misleading.
Must have been bad information which happens a lot doing this… from people who should know I did an episode on straight Duesenberg 260 the one that came before the DOHC every source that I saw said that it had three main bearing which doesn’t really make sense on a straight eight.. turns out that that is misinformation. It has five main bearings. The water pump had three main bearings. Someone saw that and didn’t read what came after and now every site you can find information on the internet says 3 main bearings I did that episode so long ago I don’t remember where I got the information from. Otherwise I would cite it. I’m gonna try to do the Chrysler LA soon, but I keep running into contradicting information and I think that that’s why I haven’t done it yet. Some people draw the line different places with what engines are in that family. ..
This is a great engine family. The B and RB engines were very reliable, and they had good power output for their displacement. They powered some legendary cars.
Im told the Highway Patrol liked the 440s because it would just keep pulling on the top end.
All of the Virginia State Police cars used on Interstates during the late 1960s and early 1970s were lower-end Plymouth Furies (Fury I?) with 440 "Super Commando" V-8s. The cars had numerically low rear-end ratios that supposedly gave the cars top speeds of 140 MPH.
All the way to 149 mph in 1969.
The minor confusion about whether these engines ended in 1978 or 79 is likely because Chrysler filled warehouses with these in 1978 for use in the following year. The Trenton engine plant had the B series tooling removed to make room for newer engines for small cars. Those engines would be the A452 (2.2 liter ) and other variations like the never -built A453, which was a 3 valve version of the 2.2 liter engine. I worked in Chrysler engine development engineering until late 1979. I am enjoying your videos.
Thank you so much for sharing that insight =)
Did you get to meet any big names like Virgil exner Elwood engle? I know they are designers
Glad you dig this channel =)
Great episode as always. It IS difficult to keep all this straight, the cross over in CI adds to it. Well presented! WYR: 1970 Challenger (440 6 Pack please), 1960 Imperial Crown. Thanks as always ~ Chuck
I wanted this episode to come out yesterday, but I couldn’t figure out with a 383. I had some conflicting information about the B engine once or said that it was only made for one year and I was like we were the other 383 come from because they made 3 million of them. lol
A couple weeks back I really wanted to do an engine episode on the early general motors V8 that were made by Northway .. I believe that’s the name of the manufacture. They also did the Cole V8 it would be the Cadillac, V8, Oakland, V8 and the Viking V8 but information on some of those are really hard to come by on the Internet so that one kind of got placed on the shelf the Viking V8 is an interesting piece of machinery. The valves are horizontal instead of vertical… one day
Also, not sure if they should all get their own individual engine episode or they should all be grouped together because of some similarities also from the same brand GM
Great choices =) glad you dig this one
@@What.its.like. that’s the level of effort that you put into this that is so greatly appreciated by all of us!
Regarding the engines, just a thought… Individual episodes, and then a separate episode on the similarities. It could show the evolution within general motors as well.
Once again, thanks for everything you do.
Works of internal combustion art
It sure was a radical change in engineering direction going from 392's to the B / RB series. I would imagine that 1959 was a frantic year operating the new engine plants and ramping down the old production lines . I read that Ed Donovan inquired about purchasing the drawings for the 392 in 1960 , he was told that nothing was saved , all gone. It took him 10 more years but eventually he did make his own ( 417 Donovan ).
The RB block is much heavier than the block of a 392. The 392 and 413 ( 1959 ) actually weigh about the same . The B-RB block is an incredible piece of engineering without a doubt. Imagine if they had went with more of a Poly head design .
WYR the Challenger is such a classic that it was used as a styling base for the new ones. The Jensen FF was an English product not much seen here, but highly revered there. The Chrysler 300 cars were in the same vein of luxury tied with high performance. Tough choice but I'll go with the Jensen for it's conversation-starting obscurity.
The later Mopar cars were more interchangeable than many realize, and the "K-frame" and torsion bars could be swapped to allow "A" to "B" (or backwards) engine changes, so this happened rather frequently allowing poorer hot rodders to buy a cheaper small-engine "A" car, then go to the junkyard and grab the "B" parts for a hop-up on a budget afterwards. Collectors always need to check serial numbers and production codes to know a car isn't one of these. Sort of a 'modular' design long before 'modular' became popular. Nothing new under the sun so they say...
Awesome choices. Thank you so much for sharing all the information and insight greatly appreciated.
My dad lived in MI. Got married, and bought a '58 fury convert with the 350...he sold it within 2 years due to all the cracked windshields he had to replace. Something about the roads in Lansing...he then bought a beetle and drove it to CA. The folks back home thought, a fury to a beetle???
That’s crazy. Going from a fury to a beetle. Thank you so much for sharing that story.
Awesome episode. Never knew Chrysler made a 350. Let alone two different 383.
In the end, i am tak8ng the 59 Fury and the 1964 Chrysler 300
Glad you dig this episode it’s crazy that Chrysler made a big block 350 before Chevy made a small block 350
For WYR, it's the 1970 Dodge Challenger, and the '64 Chrysler 300.
Sweet choices =)
If you want big block power for your Mopar project but can't find an engine at a good price start scouting for abandoned motor homes. 413 wedges were in a lot of them until 79.
Great information thank you so much for sharing that
The later 413 in motorhomes was an "industrial" engine. It had very different heads and waterpump housing arrangements. The short block is the same though, and uses a fantastic forged steel crankshaft. Regular automotive heads, water pump housing, etc, all bolt right onto the Industrial 413 (and 361).
By the mid 70's alot of motorhomes came with 440's with regular automotive accessories (not industrial). Early ones had a forged steel crank but most unfortunately came with a cast steel crank. Still good bones to build off of though.
440 was also in alot of motor homes and industrial applications
The Facel-Vega and the Jensen. Force me to pick just one, and its the Interceptor hands down. James Bond level of cool factor.
I'm not a Mopar guy at all, but every Mopar with a 383 that I ever drove was a seriously fast car, including the land yacht New Yorkers. Fantastic engines. I also never liked the Beach Boys song where the FI Corvette beats a 413 Mopar. A 62 Dart with a 413 was an amazingly fast car. Finally, that Jensen in the photo is not an FF. FF stands for Ferguson Formula, an early AWD system. Jensen FFs had two of those vertical vent thingies between the door and the front wheel opening, and are extremely rare. (As an aside, there was a 66 Mustang built with a FF drive train. I've only seen pics of it). I had a customer in the mid 70's who had a regular Jensen Interceptor with 440 and it was very cool. He told me that he bought a house, and the car came with it! WYR: 70 Challenger and the Jensen, but that 63 300 is an absolutely beautiful car! As always, great info, and I learned a few things!
Did the Corvette win? I always thought the 413 won the race. Funny, you should mention that I got the opportunity to do both in a comparison episode, and I got so much flack for it, because evidently the beach boys were singing about a for 13 in a Dodge, but they say superstock in the song ram charger was Dodge superstock with Plymouth. I had a whole part explaining all of that at the end of the episode, but I decided to cut it out last minute.
Thank you so much for the correction on the Jensen. I’ve never seen one, so I had no clue what it looked like.
Sweet choices. Thank you so much for all the corrections and information. This was a hard engine episode to put together a lot harder than I thought it would be.
That song is based on a real race where the Dart beat the Stingray 3 times in a row. LOL.
@@1966-Charger Too bad the song doesn't reflect that!
@@61rampy65 Yes. Just some GM loving beach boys, LOL. Artistic license.
67 chrysler new yorker 2 door 440 nice driving car
I believe that the 361 was also manufactured until 78 for medium duty trucks and one of the many Chrysler big block engines l had in various Chrysler vehicles was a 361 in a 64 Dodge Custom 880 four door hardtop it was a very dependable engine and l would like to have another one.
Thanks for the video 👍😾
It’s quite possible there was tons of conflicting information with this one and some of the ending dates wasn’t as cut and dry as it is for a lot of other engine families
Yes it was. The 361 and 413 were used for Industrial applications up until the end of Big Block production. They were in Dodge medium duty trucks, as well as generators, water pumps, forklifts, etc...... Fantastic engines 👌
@@johneckert1365I have seen and bought some parts from a 413 marine engine - it had the corresponding water jackets and inclined intake manifold ( to keep the carburetor level while the boat's bow was planing up).
@@ervinthompson6598 Cool
I've had them all except for the 426 Hemi.
My favorite Chrysler engines have been the 340, 383 and the 413. Can't go wrong with any!
Awesome
Thank you again. That was a lot of research for you to sort out all that!
Yeah Chrysler and ford are hard to do I honestly think Chrysler is harder to do than Ford, because their engine line is all over the place and they different engine, families that have the same displacements
I'd take that beautiful Fury, and that groovy looking Jensen!🤩😎
As a MOPAR guy that steeps himself in the history of all the encompassed brands, going all the way back to the year 1900 when brothers John and Horace Dodge fpunded rhe company, producing engines, frames and orher parts for automotive manufacturers -- I seriously appreciate this video and the depth you go into about these engines.
Thank you potato joe it means a lot =) I love doing these engine episodes I learn a lot as well like where all the engines come from and different families
Question do you know anything about GM northway engines Cadillac Oakland, and Viking V8
If you know any information on those engines, could you email me?
What_its_like@yahoo.com
59 Plymouth Fury 😱 all 9 yards of her 😂
Any time you put an American V8 in a British Auto !!!!
Your in for Fun ☺️ !!!! Guaranteed.....
Happy Motoring ✌️🤠
Haha nice
great choices glad you dig this episode
I had a 76 Dodge Charger with the 400 but I bought it with a blown engine and I put a 72 Chrysler 440 in her it was a fun car to drive.
I have been waiting literally forever for you to have a 1963 or a 1964 Chrysler Newport, New Yorker or a 300. Very nice to see that 64 and hopefully you can find one for a full story on it in the future.
Definitely want to cover more Chrysler that’s for sure and imperials I’ve been looking, but Chrysler are hard to find
Mopar was killing it on the quarter mile track in the sixties. Factory race cars with big block engines, or A/FX big block/factory experimentals, were the hot ticket everybody wanted! Between Mopar, and Ford, they dominated everything! Now the price on one of those clone cars is just stupid! In my opinion the wedge engine run better than the hemi!
Great video! The 361 was available in Chrysler built cars up to 1966. I have one in my Charger. In '67 the 361 was gone for car production. The 413 was available through 1965.
Awesome thank you so much for that correction
59 new Yorker. 60 belevedere. 65/66 & 71 -74 charger
Awesome choices
All gone now, nothing but memories never to be forgotten.
Still Alive and Well in Germany. 370 000 on one of mine, still running like new.
Got a disassembled "U" code and it's RB 727 HD if needed by someone over ther. I'm too old and decrepit now to play around with that stuff anymore.@@bigblockjalopy
Not gone. Still powering my 4x4 pick-up.Many Mopar musclecars still alive out there as well.
I have a disassembled "U" code and the RB-727HD that I'm now too old and decrepit to ever do anything with. @@bigblockjalopy
My 361 and 413 engines are still moving cars!
Great episode, Possibly 2 errors, I think the diagram at 2:00 is wrong, I don’t recall the B or RB heads ever crossing the pushrod and valves, only the HEMI. Two I believe the heads were interchangeable with the Road Runner 383 B block using the 440 RB heads and cam. A bit better breathing. (EDIT read the text at 12:42!!). I have a good many books and magazines on the subject. My family would win most B/RB conversations, between my father & I in model year order: 65 Polara convertible 383, 66 Chrysler 300 convertible 383 4bbl, 67 Monaco wagon 383, 68 Monaco sedan 383 (my first car), 68 Newport convertible 383, 69 Newport Custom 383, 72 Monaco 400, 75 New Yorker 440, 76 Dodge Power Wagon 440, max 5 at one time. I worked at a gas station, my boss also had a collection of 383s and 440s in his cars. He had a 426 max wedge but blew it up before we met.
Good eye … That’s a polyspheric engine. Note the position of the oil filter and oil pump …
I could not find an engine cut away for the B series engine. That’s why I left all that stuff up there because it said it was a 361 Dodge. Generally I would get rid of that…
But I was looking at that diagram as well that cut away I should say, and there was two things that I didn’t like about that cut away the the pushrods as you stated, and it looks like the oil pump was inside the engine Thank you so much for pointing those out.
A slant 6, with a fabricated intake manifold, with air to water intercooler inside. Used to adapt a scavenger from a Detroit 4-71 diesel. With a 650 holley carb. Making about 0.5-1psi at idle, and 4-5 psi at 1000-1200 rpm about 15 psi at 2400 to 5500 rpm. With a ported head . It should really surprise people !
I was just watching power nation where they got 400 hp out of a turbo charged slant six
I really want to build a Grand Prix race car it's one of my favorite five designs of all time but I wanna build my own and I'm thinking 6 cylinder power plant ( idk when this will ever come to light just something I want to do and have something no one else has) the slant six is a contender with big cam and triple webers is the way to go nothing sexier.. than seeing those trumpets when one opens the hood
Also thought about a turbo flathead six those engines are cheap no one wants them and they sound great
ruclips.net/video/oj-xkUBLLCQ/видео.htmlsi=YUIQLHM0E4s6KX2c
1959 Fury. 1966 Jensen.
Sweet choices =)
For those that don't know, that Jensen was a British car that ran a 440. I imagine it was pretty hard to keep rubber on the rear unless it was weighted down.
Early versions had the 383.
Cool vid. I would rather have the 1962 Facel Vega II and 1966 Jensen FF. Easy choices here for me.
We are on the same page, love those 2 cars
Awesome choices I’ve never seen a facial Vega or Jensen in person. Someone requested a facial Vega last year come to find out the only made 190-ish of them so that’s kind of a tall order. I’m sure I’ll get to it one day.
@@What.its.like. Facel Vega, Jay. 😉
The other 'Would you Rather' is easy too. The Imperial.
Sweet choice
Hi Jay!: 'Ya know I love the engine episodes! I learn something new every time! I was familiar with all these engines, except for the 350 and 400. Somehow it escaped me that Chrysler Corp, Made those discpacements. WYR. . . .Hmmmmmm. . .going with Challenger on the first one, gonna' pick Jensen on the second, just too interesting!
Awesome choices. Glad you learned something in this episode, I think it’s really cool to see where all of the different engines come from
1970 Dodge Challenger, and 1964 Chrysler 300.
Sweet choices =)
The 1959 plymouth furey in the same color as in the picture that was a Butiful car
Sweet =)
1959 Plymouth Fury.
There were several euro made sport and GT cars powered with Mopar engines
Bristol, Jensen, Facel Vega and maybe some others
Monteverdi is another
I couldn’t pronounce that one. I was thinking about putting that in the options.
I'd go for the '59 Plymouth, '70 Challenger and the '60 Imperial. I'd have to have all 3.
I’ve been looking for one of those imperials it would be awesome to compare to a Cadillac of 59 Cadillac because everybody thinks the 59 Cadillac fins or the biggest fin. I think the imperial got them beat.
Operating on a circuit route carrying tourists or sightseers through Arlington National Cemetery there used to be bus like vehicles pulling trailer coaches at low speed. Not sure if they are still over there and if so the original ones. I think the tug which I remember as also carrying passengers was powered by a derated 440 powered by some compressed/liquefied gas such as propane or butane
maybe some smaller version of the B/RB engine ?
were some of the B/RB block engines lemons from the factory?
When you got one of them that was put together right,and kept fed with good oil,coolant and gasoline that didn't detonate they seemed about indestructible. (Did some come with unusual coolant from the factory that needed to be completely flushed out before you added ordinary "green" drugstore prestone?) When these engines were in their heyday I think was also the time where a lot of bad oil that would varnish or sludge even when changed on schedule was being sold to the public. (Also a problem for everyone else' engines in that era)
Thank you so much for sharing all of that information and insight greatly appreciate it
Good video Jay this one is a complicated one to follow I’m sure it was hard to research, thanks mopar 😂, I have been researching the 75 400 and it appears to be a underrated diamond in the ruff. For the world you rather I’ll take the Vega gt and the Jensen as they are beautiful and very rare and powerful 👍
This was a really hard one to do. I think that’s why I’ve been putting the Chrysler engines on sort of the side burner. We still have to do the LA and the elephant hemi 426 I’m sure there’s another engine family in there somewhere
Absolutely! Too many people hate the 400 because it was a low power dog, but that's just because of emissions at the time. It's dimensions give it amazing potential! Huge bore and a short stroke make it a screamer! Even with the stock low compression pistons, some good heads and manifolds, along with a good cam make a great engine ❤
1:50 that's not a Wedge. Some incorrect info here. Some parts interchange between the 383 B and 383 RB. Heads, oiling system, exhaust manifolds, water pump hsg, fuel pump/ rod, camshaft. They are not completely different. And RB stands for raised block, not race block.
These are the greatest, most reliable engines ever build. Esp. the B.
It said 361 Dodge, but it did not look like a wedge I could not find a wedge cut out
It does say in the video that the RB is for raised block also discusses how the RB is 3/4 of an inch taller than the regular block
You took the words right out of my mouth. Besides the block, intake manifold, crank, pushrods, and pistons/rods, EVERYTHING else is interchangeable between the B and RB.
Not on the 383 you can’t use the pistons they are different as well as connecting rods and posh rods are also different it says nothing is interchangeable between the 383s might be able to use the heads
@@What.its.like. Nobody here said the pistons and rods interchange. Again, most of the parts interchange, except crank, rods, pistons, push rods, intake manifold and distributor. You can even run B intakes on RB engines with adapters, or RB distributors on B engines with an adapter. You can stroke the B using a RB crank.
It is basically the same engine, just with a taller deck height and a smaller bore.
I was just clarifying what was said in the video
All the finned cars. 65/66 & 71 - 74 chargers
This 'Would you Rather' is easy. 1959 Plymouth Fury.
Cool choice
"Smitty" was one of my high school friends. He, like me, was a committed VW fan. I had an '85 Scirocco Turbo, and he had a beautiful brown '79 Scirocco with low miles that would be a collectors item today. In any case, he wrecked the Scirocco and needed a car and a neighbor down the street had a '66 Plymouth Fury convertible that he didn't want anymore so Smitty bought the thing for $800. It was a beater, but it was red, it was a convertible, it had glass packs and it sounded good. Wasn't that fast but it had good pickup. We were trying to figure out what was under the hood, and came to the conclusion that it was a 383. It must have been, because it ate gas like Trump eats McDonalds~
-We went out for a drive one day in Bedford Township, Michigan and some spud in a Ford Escort cut us off. It was really stupid what that guy did, especially since that Plymouth didn't have the great brakes that Volkswagens had. Smitty gets next to him at a light "Hey Wally? You want your ass beat or something?" He says to the willowy kid in the drivers seat of the Ford. Smitty was a fat pig, 6'2 and 225 pounds, but he looked like a football player and the bad driver in the Escort just stared ahead and tried to ignore us.
Back to the Plymouth: When we were riding in this car, I noticed that whenever Smitty got on it [which was every single green light], I heard a loud thunk from the front end. When he had the hood open, I examined the motor mounts and I was aghast to see that the drivers side appeared to be resting not on the motor mount, but on the log exhaust manifold itself!
"Uhmm...Smitty? Are you seeing this? I think the manifold is sitting on the frame rail...."
"Hmm. Yeah, maybe. Ask me if I give a shit about this car"
I just kind of shook my head. That car needed a TON of work but it would have been a perfect restoration project. Guess what? He wrecked that car too....
Great video!
Thank you so much for sharing that awesome story I had friends like Smitty that couldn’t keep cars for whatever reason anytime they saw an obstacle in front of them. They just slam on the gas and think the insurance company was gonna give them a new car…
I knew a guy that could go through cars like they were water. He never had a good vehicle because he just had to keep on cars every couple months. I don’t know I don’t get people like that.
I’m all for buying a really cheap car and seeing how long it will last for not buying a really cheap car and hitting the first thing that I see .. lol big difference
Rumors say It was demanded by Congress that Chrysler discontinue its Big Block V-8's in order to get the Federally Guaranteed Loans that Chrysler needed to get the K-Car into production. Otherwise, they would had kept them for their Trucks.
That’s super interesting
I never heard that, but it wouldn’t surprise me.
Also, didn’t Dodge discontinue their D-Series trucks in ‘77, which most often were equipped with RB’s?
@@Clyde-2055I believe so. Yes, most Dodge medium duty trucks used Industrial 361-413 Big Blocks. Some used the LA 318 and some even used a Slant Six.
Interestingly, Dodge halted thier medium duty truck production the same year International Harvester halted thier light duty truck production :(
Really complicated to understand all the nuances of these engines
did the RB 383 come and go while the lower deck 383 continued to be produced?
I believe some of the higher compression versions of these had cross bolts into the main bearing caps and upgraded and/or intrinsically balanced crankshafts?
Does the famous but seldom seen second generation Hemi share mostly the RB block structure?
This was a really hard engine family to do. the way I understand it is the B (low block and RB we’re built at the same time as one another the 383RB golden lion is only found in the Windsor and Saratoga from 1959 and 1960.. While the B was in every thing else..) what gets me is why go through that much trouble to offer the 383 why not just give them a 413 and say it’s a 383
@@What.its.like.yes, build at the same time. The RB 383 was Chrysler only and ONLY in the 1959/60 model year. Plymouth Dodge and Desoto got the Low Deck (which is the better engine).
1964 Plymouth Sport Fury with 413.
Sweet choice
In my humble opinion which won't buy you a cup of coffee anywhere. These were the best engines chrysler ever produced. Famed for power for the sleepers. The 361 fueled the hunger for more. If we had a 2000 pound machine to put it in allot of us would not be here. On which would we prefer 1970 cuda. Closer to the 2000 pound machine.
These were great engines =) great write in
WYR: Facel Vega, Imperial Crown
Awesome choices I gotta find a facial Vega to review
@@What.its.like. Yes, you do! Better get on that Dude!😁
I want an old 75 Yorker to cruise in with a 440
=)
we had alot of cop cars with 361
1959 Plymouth fury
Sweet choice
Chrysler does some engineering, but not much, anymore.
Those Wagoneers look extremely nice, but it’s a pity that a lot of them become paperweights overtime
WYR:
1- Challenger
2- Jensen
3- 1970 Plymouth Superbird
Sweet choices with great write in
The 60 imperial
Facel-Vega and Chrysler 300
Awesome choices
The facel vega II
Sweet choice =)
The Facel Vega (find one) or 300 no other choice.
Awesome choice of this finding a facial Vega would be really hard to do. I guess the only made 190 of those I’m going to try to cover one this year.
I want Christine
Nice =)
Not many people want a possessed car
Everybody here that knows the movie would want Christine !!
As a bonus, it would be nice to have a forever-young Alexandra Paul chained in the back seat …
@@What.its.like. - I’d much prefer Mean Christine over that talking Firebird (KITT) that was driven around by that pretty-boy David Hasselhoff …
'70 Challenger, '66 Jensen.
Sweet choices
The 70 challenger
Sweet =)
1971 Chalenger but not Red.
59 Plymouth, just don't make her mad
66 Jensen
Song, not a clue....
Sweet choices =)
First choice 62 Facel Vega second 1966 Jenson.
Awesome choices
@@What.its.like. Reading the comments below if you ever see a Facel or a Jensen in person especially the Jensen Interceptor you will love them, they have jaw dropping style, use to be a couple of interceptors running around Austin, and I saw a Facel 2 door at a car show in person and there is nothing like it, and I liked the styling so much, I didn't spend much time looking at the 65 Riveria next to it, and the 4 door Facel Vega looks so awesome to me it has the 57-58 Eldorado Brougham and the 61-69 Lincoln Continental beat, and with the same suicide door styling
I’m going to see if there’s anyway to cover one this year I would love to go to Hyman and cover some cars. He has a couple for sale. It’s just 8 1/2 hours away from here. Lol.
WYR 1: All of them.
WYR 2: All of them.
The Challenger had better be white. If it ain't white, it ain't The Vanishing Point.
You’re showing your age …
Even to this day, I have an appreciation for the Honda 350 !
@@Clyde-2055 I'm 20, and I don't know much about the Honda 350.
@@ColtonRMagby - You mean you don’t remember the cute-as-hell naked blonde gal riding the Honda 350 ?? That’s a high-point in the movie …
I would have loved to be that Honda seat !!
@@Clyde-2055 I haven't seen the movie, but I watched Death Proof. The Challenger in that movie was supposedly in The Vanishing Point.
@@ColtonRMagbyAll the Vanishing Point Challengers were destroyed.
question 1 #1 and 3, question 2 #1 and 3,
Awesome choices =)
1964 Chrysler.
Facel Vega
Imperial
Sweet choices
59 Plymouth, 60 Imperial.
Sweet choices
62 chrysler 300
Awesome choice =)
The two 318s were NOT totally different. They used the same rotating assembly.
,
I would take a 67 GTX over any of them
Nice write in =)
Can't you get your facts right😢😢😢
.
PLEASE SLOW DOWN YOUR SPEECH!!!!!!!!
Your statement concerning the 318 is woefully inaccurate. The 318 A motor is basically the same block as the LA block, the LA denoting different lightweight casting. Many many many parts interchange. So a little more research and clarify your mistake. People trying to learn do not need to be misled, but as I have said before, you're learning and getting better than when you started, but this mistake is decidedly misleading.
However, it should be obvious that you are doing an interesting job as is evidenced by the fact that I watch your posts.
Must have been bad information which happens a lot doing this… from people who should know
I did an episode on straight Duesenberg 260 the one that came before the DOHC every source that I saw said that it had three main bearing which doesn’t really make sense on a straight eight.. turns out that that is misinformation. It has five main bearings. The water pump had three main bearings. Someone saw that and didn’t read what came after and now every site you can find information on the internet says 3 main bearings
I did that episode so long ago I don’t remember where I got the information from. Otherwise I would cite it.
I’m gonna try to do the Chrysler LA soon, but I keep running into contradicting information and I think that that’s why I haven’t done it yet. Some people draw the line different places with what engines are in that family. ..