We Prove Whether a Stock 426 HEMI Makes The 425 Horsepower That Chrysler Claimed Back in 1970

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2023
  • Back when we were building the "Comeback 'Cuda" for Mopar Connection Magazine, we took our nearly-factory stock 426 HEMI to Tommy's Auto Machine & Parts to see if this pachyderm really makes the 425 Horsepower that Ma' Mopar claimed back in the day. How did it do? Watch to find out HERE:
    DO YOU LIKE WHAT WE DO? SUPPORT US HERE:
    www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted...
    Mopar Connection Magazine is the Internet's ONLY daily digital Mopar enthusiast magazine, publishing new articles every day Monday-through-Friday entirely subscription free to you!
    Check us out at www.moparconnectionmagazine.com and sign up for our FREE weekly newsletters HERE: moparconnectionmagazine.com/s...
    #moparconnection #comebackcuda #426hemi
  • Авто/МотоАвто/Мото

Комментарии • 320

  • @bobkonradi1027
    @bobkonradi1027 6 месяцев назад +77

    MoPar rated the hemi as 425 HP @ 5000 rpm. What they neglected to say was that the dyno pulls went to 6000 rpm, and at 6000 revs, the engine put out 495 hp. There is a content provider on RUclips, "Nick's Garage" and he has a weekly show specializing in MoPars. Particularly he works on a ;lot of 440s and hemis, although other engines come into the shop as well. In one of his shows he re-created a stock spec 426 hemi, totally stock except for a .030 overbore. He then ran it on his SuperFlow 902 dyno, and that's what it put out. Sure enough, at 5000 rpm it was 425 hp, but at 6000 the totally stock hemi put out 495 hp.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +16

      Ours began to lay over around 5750. You’ll see on the graph. We might’ve been able to duplicate his results with a bit more fuel and timing. Possibly.

    • @stephenwest798
      @stephenwest798 28 дней назад +2

      @@moparconnection Were you running solid lifters or hydraulic lifters and if you were running solids were they set at .028 intake cold and .032 exhaust cold? Nick tightens the lash up on his until they "sound right"! The factory spec sheet the dealer gave me said .028 intake cold and .032 exhaust cold and .030 intake hot and .030 exhaust hot, didn't say a word about decibels, and they sure did clatter.

    • @matrox
      @matrox 17 дней назад +3

      Almost up there with my 17' SS Camaro 6spd. rated at 455 net HP. SAE HP at the crank is a little over 500hp factory stock.

    • @stephenwest798
      @stephenwest798 17 дней назад +2

      @@matrox Funny how many people get different hp figures on the dyno with the 426 hemi, most get 525hp at 6000rpm and power nation got 820hp with a blueprinted 426 hemi, who do you believe? I had a 426 hemi and never found any competition on the street and yeh there were plenty of muscle cars around and many were anything but stock and raced at the local strip and all top fuel dragsters and funny cars run Chrysler Hemis, just a fact of life. All I have to say is having power and knowing how to use it sure helps and spinning isn't winning, always left at 1800 rpm and never power shifted. And let's not forget that the 426 hemi and fords 429 hemi were required to run restrictor plates so the GM cars could keep up and that is another fact of life.

    • @ThePaulv12
      @ThePaulv12 12 дней назад +2

      Compression would play a part. This had 9.6:1, Nick's was in the factory range. They say about 5% more power per point of compression. If this had 10.25:1 then that would add about 15 more HP, narrowing the gap a bit. Nicks may have been 10.5:1 but I could be wrong.
      The 632hp 505 dual plane single quad Hemi he dynoed was what blew me away.

  • @ragingbull3406
    @ragingbull3406 6 месяцев назад +32

    Nick's garage built one to stock specs too. It made 490tq/490hp.

  • @dbx1233
    @dbx1233 3 часа назад

    You mentioned this was rebuilt from a bear body. That would have been very difficult, because I rebuilt one from a hippopotamus body and that thing was a monster. So, hats off to you.

  • @randylear8264
    @randylear8264 6 месяцев назад +22

    Thanks for your approach to this Hemi build. The HP of these engines are all over the place. This is a good approach at what might have been delivered to the public in the 70’s. The Hemi is the most legendary engine offered in the 60’s and 70’ s and that is without a doubt. You either wanted a Hemi or you wanted to beat a Hemi. It was the litmus test on the street. Wether it lived up to the hype or not is not the answer. As legends go it got bigger and bigger in street lore. And as the top engine used in top fuel it also backed up the hype. Yes an LS6 454 is legendary too. As is the 427 Ford. Even small blocks have status. But the Hemi sits on top because of the hype. I have never owned a 2nd Gen. Hemi but I drove one one time in 79. A 66 Hemi Charger automatic. And I only got into it a little bit. But the torque was without question evident to me. If you wanted a Hemi to rule your streets, it took more money and wrenching. But it was an awesome starting package. Headers and a high lift cam would give back startlingly results. But tuning the distributor and carbs was a must after such modifications. The Hemi was a detuned race engine. And you had to return it back to what it needed to be with the right parts. You could go full bore and add 12:1 pistons and oil mods too. It was just what you could afford to do. Same with the other big blocks available at the time. It was definitely a different world in those days. And I miss them. Simpler times. Thanks for the video.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +3

      No this was meant to be a tribute to the car as it wouldve been in the showroom. I’m personally building a 572 Hemi that’ll be quite rowdy.

    • @randylear8264
      @randylear8264 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@moparconnection I know. That is why I said your approach was as it would have been delivered in the 70’s stock factory car. Or my meaning was such. I bet that 572 is a beast. Now that is legendary.

    • @jesseduke694
      @jesseduke694 6 месяцев назад +3

      I would argue it having the top "legendary status". I would say the ford cammer has more legendary status. What people's actual opinion is of the engine might vary. But as far as legendary? My vote would be the cammer. Becouse who dous anybody know that actually has or had a cammer?? In a rare moment one might see a hemi. But most never see a cammer in a liftime.

    • @stevo196two9
      @stevo196two9 6 месяцев назад +6

      Yes I’m a Ford guy. I love the camera however it was never put in our car. Chrysler somehow offered from 66 to 71 like you say it was incredible time in history. I am 61 years old. I miss those days cruising Whittier Boulevard I graduated 81 back then you could buy a street hemi for around 04 to $5000 believe it or not. I remember gas being way under a dollar a gallon.😢

    • @jesseduke694
      @jesseduke694 6 месяцев назад

      @stevo196two9 ur right, there is no Vin code that would indicate a factory cammer car. It was made available though as a "high rev, race ready, replacment engine" for your new Ford car. A over the counter ford replacment part.

  • @peep39
    @peep39 6 месяцев назад +4

    My wife has a real 71 Cuda, 340 4 speed, Bahama yellow. Needs a full resto, which is on my list, but for now it's protected

  • @censored1360
    @censored1360 6 месяцев назад +4

    My buddy who is working on my 70 442 is a huge mopar guy. He has some really cool cars trucks ect.. I think its a replica but 1 truck he has is The Little Red Wagon he takes it to Cordova for some show every year

  • @ericpederson5291
    @ericpederson5291 6 месяцев назад

    Hey thanks for the response on compression. I love watching the videos, have a great day. Thats crazy how the actual numbers would that off.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      Yeah it’s super disappointing but given how expensive and frankly, difficult the Hemis were to machine, racers and builders found all sorts of inconsistencies.

  • @704406bbl
    @704406bbl 11 дней назад +1

    Beautiful Cuda. I'd rather have a tribute car than a museum piece you're terrified to drive and have fun with. Drive it like you stole it!

  • @plymouthdie-castreplicas
    @plymouthdie-castreplicas 6 месяцев назад +1

    Smooth job, guys! Mopar queen and the king of engines💪 Perfect!👌

  • @tomstrum6259
    @tomstrum6259 6 месяцев назад +5

    Thx for truthful informative video...Your Dyno performance numbers seem just about right..With 1000 miles, my factory pure stock '70 hemi cuda Automatic click off 13.1's @ 107 all summer day long with full gas tank @ 4000 lbs.....Carbs never Touched, 4.10 Dana, 35° timing ....

  • @davidcross4815
    @davidcross4815 6 месяцев назад +5

    Interesting.
    I have a 426 in my '68 charger ( not original )
    Its a late '66 casting.
    The engine was built by Al Lee, of Lee brothers ( ' 68 hemi SS barracuda fame )
    I talked to him after installing the engine and he told me he had punched it out 60 thousand and installed the correct factory mechanical cam.
    Other than electronic ignition and a gorgeous 3" TTI exhaust, its totally stock right down to the Carter carbs.
    Al told me, from his experience, it should be just a little over 500 at the flywheel.
    This summer i plan on taking her down the 1/4 to see.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +1

      Awesome! That sounds like a lot of fun!

  • @mikedaugharty5544
    @mikedaugharty5544 6 месяцев назад +1

    Great video there Kevin love to see them all cars back on the road in excellent shape great horsepower and torque love the video

  • @glengabruch4664
    @glengabruch4664 6 месяцев назад +9

    Awesome video. 👍 My Mopar is my 1968 Barracuda fastback powered by a 400 based 512 stroker featuring Trick Flow 240 heads and a hydraulic roller cam with 254 duration @.050 with 618 lift, backed by an A833 4 speed manual. 👍

  • @johnnystanley4469
    @johnnystanley4469 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for sharing great video

  • @richardlewis4288
    @richardlewis4288 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for that awesome demonstration of the beloved hemi!🇺🇸

  • @GrandPitoVic
    @GrandPitoVic 6 месяцев назад +6

    The hi po engines back then always put out more power. They lowered the numbers for insurance purposes. Great build.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +2

      Some did, yes. Others manipulated how HP was calculated/

    • @GrandPitoVic
      @GrandPitoVic 6 месяцев назад

      That's true

    • @DortonFarb
      @DortonFarb 6 месяцев назад

      Lol, no.

    • @PiDsPagePrototypes
      @PiDsPagePrototypes 6 месяцев назад

      Lower numbers also mean that one customer that hates everybody couldn't sue over finding out it had less power or torque then claimed.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +3

      Americans were far less litigious pansies back then.

  • @edsmachine93
    @edsmachine93 6 месяцев назад

    Nice video Kevin.
    Would have been nice to seen some of the machine work and parts as well as the processes.
    Should be a great engine.
    Have a great day.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      That’s why we linked the three dozen articles we wrote on it.

  • @fatbubba1964
    @fatbubba1964 5 часов назад

    I'm really surprised it wasn't more, although I'm not a Mopar fan, the big 3 underrated the horsepower back then to help squeeze thru insurance prices, yes the insurance company's were eating people alive on the high horsepower cars back then too

  • @Jon_Flys_RC
    @Jon_Flys_RC 6 месяцев назад +4

    Engine Masters tested the 426 Hemi vs a 440 and it turned out the hemi was great for….high sustained rpm but the 440 made killer torque for drag racing

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +1

      Makes perfect sense

    • @DavidPhillips-rs5dq
      @DavidPhillips-rs5dq 3 месяца назад

      The difference in tq comes from the cubic inches not the top end. If a hemi had as many cubes it would have made just as much tq and way more hp.

    • @superkillr
      @superkillr 3 часа назад

      @@DavidPhillips-rs5dq yeah and if a 318 was 800 cubes... it would make more power. BUt guess what.... it isn't Don't blame the OP because mopar never put any cubes behind the hemi heads.

  • @jeffjames1743
    @jeffjames1743 6 месяцев назад +4

    Thanks! Certainly no other engines could match the street hemi in 1966 when it came out and they would make more power in the upper rpm range than anything else.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      Not the street ones, but with a little bit of love they screamed!

    • @terrypikaart4394
      @terrypikaart4394 6 месяцев назад +3

      396 425hp and 7200 with ease in stock form

    • @DavidPhillips-rs5dq
      @DavidPhillips-rs5dq 3 месяца назад

      So it couldn't come within 50 hp of a hemi? That's nice

    • @buzzwaldron6195
      @buzzwaldron6195 9 дней назад

      In 1967 Chevy responded with the "430 HP" L88 427" engine in the sales literature... that was actually 560 HP at 6600 RPMs...

  • @kirkthejerkthe1st
    @kirkthejerkthe1st 6 месяцев назад +4

    In 1970 Hemis came with a hydraulic cam I believe, so no E body solid lifter cams.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      I’d love to see documentation for that because we couldn’t find it elsewhere.

    • @kirkthejerkthe1st
      @kirkthejerkthe1st 6 месяцев назад

      This doesn't sound right, but according to my vintage Motors Manual (early model edition 1968-1974), only the 1971 426 came with hydraulic lifters. All other 426's were solid lifters clearanced at .028 intake and .032 exhaust (cold). The hydraulic cammed cars had adjustable rockers and a spec. for that.

    • @jamesblair9614
      @jamesblair9614 5 месяцев назад +1

      The 70-71 Hemi’s all had hydraulic cams, the specs were the same as the 68-69 series 2 cam, just hydraulic, and they still retained the adjustable rockers, but shorter push rods. Just look in any 70-71 service manual for documentation.

    • @kirkthejerkthe1st
      @kirkthejerkthe1st 5 месяцев назад

      Just as I originally stated. My Motors Manual must be wrong!

    • @commentaccount49
      @commentaccount49 3 месяца назад

      @@moparconnection He's correct, hydraulic lifters for Hemis starting in 1970. It's called out in the '1970 Challenger Lineup' dealer binder, and again in the 1970 Plymouth Rapid Transit System advertisement, page 15. I'm sure it is also called out in the factory service manuals, but I don't have a '70 on hand. No solid lifter E-bodies.

  • @tomcrosby6332
    @tomcrosby6332 7 часов назад

    Super cool video

  • @kurtpoblenz2741
    @kurtpoblenz2741 6 месяцев назад +2

    Great numbers on the dyno , even with a fairly low compression ratio. Street Hemis were no slouch.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +4

      Most were dogs due to their weight (812lbs) and inconsistent machining.

  • @timcoffman8010
    @timcoffman8010 6 месяцев назад +3

    How about a 2 or 3 part series on optimizing a Six Pack setup?

  • @zamankadeem
    @zamankadeem 6 месяцев назад

    one use to have i forgot was 70 or 71 Hemi Cuda back in 1971 and he used to race it a lot in Kuwait later it went to junkyard.

  • @t.l.robinson2162
    @t.l.robinson2162 6 месяцев назад +3

    You can pull a spark plug wire off and make a 425 hp pull with a 426.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      That’s the rumor but that was with a ‘66.

  • @gordocarbo
    @gordocarbo 6 месяцев назад +1

    450/480 sounds more like reality. Too many guys saying they made sooo much more like 100,
    lol. That torque curve kicks butt for any st car. So many focus on a hp number but totally ignore the tq which is where it makes the beans.

  • @Fauxbra
    @Fauxbra 6 месяцев назад +2

    That driver side front exhaust port looks like the manifold is strangling it compared to the others.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +1

      It’s what came from the factory

    • @Fauxbra
      @Fauxbra 6 месяцев назад +1

      I understand, It's just a horrible design that was clearly the victim of packaging constraints.

    • @commentaccount49
      @commentaccount49 3 месяца назад

      Yep, switching from stock Hemi manifolds to headers was worth .3 all by itself for me at Muncie Dragway.

  • @MostlyOldPartsAndRust
    @MostlyOldPartsAndRust 6 месяцев назад +2

    I remember when Jim Drain from FL went out to see the 426 he had Dick Landy build, it made 525 HP and Jim was mad about it as it was going in his 1967 GTX Hemi 4 speed that was a pretty much an NOS car and the engine was supposed to be a stock rebuild. Dick just told Jim to calm down and when the Hemi was properly blueprinted, it would make these kind of numbers.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      Dick knew what was up.

    • @El_Peto
      @El_Peto День назад +2

      I'd guess Dick Landy was slightly knowledgeable on the engines

  • @Terry-bb7yr
    @Terry-bb7yr 6 месяцев назад

    Back in the day the 426 was no joke especially when you had high performance 3 duce 4 speed the I was around in 75 had never been rebuilt and turned 6000 rpm with no complaints.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +3

      No such thing as a triple deuce Hemi from the factory. Only dual quads.

  • @gristlepounder
    @gristlepounder 6 месяцев назад +1

    I can confirm this is an early factory HEMI solid lifter cam (or repro) as I measured the lobe lift in my lathe and it was right on spec.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      Thank you!

    • @jamesblair9614
      @jamesblair9614 5 месяцев назад

      When you say early, does that mean the mild series 1 solid cam used in 66-67, or the bit wilder series 2 solid cam used in 68-69.

    • @gristlepounder
      @gristlepounder 4 месяца назад +1

      Most likely 68-69 based on specs. I meant early as its a solid cam and not the Hyd correct for 1970. @@jamesblair9614

  • @crazyoilfieldmechanic3195
    @crazyoilfieldmechanic3195 День назад

    I have a 1969 Car Craft magazine issue in which they drag race test a 69 Roadrunner 440 6 pack automatic. They fiddled around with it and got some decent times out of it with slicks. As evening approached they realized the exhaust manifolds were glowing red hot after each pass and obviously a set of headers were needed. I've seen a true survivor Hemi Roadrunner that was absolutely bone stock but most people that bought a Hemi car for performance NEVER left it stock. A set of correctly made headers that match the stock cam and a correctly recurved factor distributor and the factory carbs rejeted by someone who knows what they are doing is worth 65 horsepower minimum so who gives a flip what the engine would do off the showroom floor ??

  • @blownonfuel
    @blownonfuel 5 месяцев назад +1

    I never knew that the #1 cylinder exhaust manifold was so restricted.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  5 месяцев назад

      Factory stock wasn't very forgiving to these engines.

  • @ldnwholesale8552
    @ldnwholesale8552 6 месяцев назад +2

    Everyone know that most of these engines had more power than advertised.
    BUT you have fitted it ro a tent car,, they flex badly. Then fitted with the tyres that killed hundreds,, Badday Polyglass. So you have a 140mph car with a 70mph chassis on 20mph tyres.

  • @claiborneeastjr4129
    @claiborneeastjr4129 2 месяца назад

    I seem to recall the stock compression ratio on the OEM spec 426 HEMI was 10.25 to 1. I think yours is a bit low. That's a really nice engine, and represents the legend of the street HEMI quite well. Sounds healthy.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  2 месяца назад +1

      That was advertised yes, but records show that many of these came out of the factory with far less compression. Quality control was not the best.

  • @ironmonkey1512
    @ironmonkey1512 6 часов назад

    I've never heard anyone say that hemi power was over rated

  • @confuse3671
    @confuse3671 4 часа назад

    A couple things.... wasn't the street hemi a hydraulic lifter engine?
    Also, blue printed engine should make more power than an off-the-line one.
    Where the hemi really excelles.... great lower rpm lift and stout bottom end - make for a really nice and reliable forced induction engine.

  • @danielroberts698
    @danielroberts698 6 месяцев назад +1

    Probably more like 465-475 with 10.25 compression like factory. Great job.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +2

      No the compression is still under 10:1.

  • @raydeangelis4737
    @raydeangelis4737 2 месяца назад +1

    I think that with some better tolerances today and machining skills it helps get a few more hp out of the "factory" motors. The race motors of the time had this 'extra' work and time put into them. But I don't believe for a second that the "street" engines in the factory cars were as under rated as the internet seems to believe. Like the rumors that the L-88 corvette 427 was really a 600 hp engine but ONLY rated at 435 in the car. Maybe 25 hp at most.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  2 месяца назад

      The race Hemis were absolutely a different animal than the heavy, slow revving street Hemis.

    • @buzzwaldron6195
      @buzzwaldron6195 9 дней назад

      The L88 427 was rated at 430 HP to get it under the top normal street 435 HP 427 so unknowledgeable rich kids wouldn't order it... stock L88s dyno at 560 HP @ 6600 RPM with headers... L88s were in the Corvette sales literature... even available with automatic tranny...
      Aluminum heads L89 or all aluminum ZL-1 427 more like 530 HP as aluminum bleeds off heat/HP faster... but saves weight...

  • @rondpert5167
    @rondpert5167 6 месяцев назад +2

    Chrysler's Hemi was a great race motor, with a wide power band. But that didn't always translate to street performance. A good 440 was usually better and many a hemi car wasted away in the garage after a few thousand miles because they needed constant, competent tuning to maintain optimal running.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +2

      Street Hemis really weren't much mightier than any other big displacement big block; in fact, most stories shared of high revving small blocks besting a street elephant have plenty of credibility.

    • @rondpert5167
      @rondpert5167 6 месяцев назад

      @@moparconnectionTrue. They usually had a weight advantage also. Back in the sixties a big block Chevy could be built to put out more peak horsepower, but the Hemi's strength was it's very broad power range, lots of torque and endurance. Although in the F.A.S.T. series, a lot of Buicks bested the Hemi cars.

  • @ShaneEstabrooks
    @ShaneEstabrooks 6 месяцев назад

    Sweet 💪

  • @paulplack490
    @paulplack490 6 месяцев назад +1

    So, 438 CID, but compression a full point lower than the Street Hemi. Those deviations may offset and get you close, but I'd still like to see what real factory-spec hemis made. I suspect that will keep getting harder to find as years go by.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +2

      Not quite. While Chrysler advertised 10.25:1 many engine builders found their street Hemis had far below that compression ratio. The compression height of our pistons, rod length and crank all remained identical to stock. The block wasn’t decked and we compensated for the decked heads with a thicker gasket. It came out to 9.6:1.

  • @stephenwest798
    @stephenwest798 6 месяцев назад +3

    Had a 1967 Satellite with the 426 Hemi 4 speed dana 60 with 3.54 gears with a track lock. I believe the compression was 10.25:1 with a slightly smaller cam then the 68&69 Hemi's. First thing I had to do was adjust the valve lash, .028 intake and .032 exhaust cold, oh my did those lifters clatter, everyone who got in the car told me there was something wrong with the engine. I know for a fact that many dealers would set them at zero lash because people would not buy them for that reason. I made two changes to the engine, one; a set of chrome moly pushrods and two; added a braided copper wire between the stationary plate and the breaker plate to eliminate ignition breakup from 5500rpm to 7000rpm. And for whatever it is worth yes it would turn 7000rpm in every gear and no you didn't hold it there in any gear so as not to grenade it and you didn't power shift it into any gear unless you wanted to do a donut. It was on H70/14 Dunlap bias ply tires so there wasn't a lot of rubber on the road. Don't understand why people complain about the Hemi being a dog on the street unless they just didn't know how to drive it. And I have talked to a few former Hemi owners and no they didn't. And hey even Nick from Nick's garage tells me he reduces the valve lash until it sounds right to him!!!!!! Gee I wonder if that's why they had a reputation for valve train wear, DUH!

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      That’s an awesome story! Man, that sounded like an awesome car.

    • @stephenwest798
      @stephenwest798 6 месяцев назад

      Yea it was and I still miss it. I have a 66 Satellite and a ton of 440's, 400's, 383's, 360's, 340's,318's, but no Hemi. Now if I could just be lucky enough to hit the lottery! I am guessing you know enough to run a remote oil filter and pipe one return into the passenger's side at the rear of the block where the sending unit goes, this will prevent oil starvation on 6,7&8 rod bearings at high rpm and you know to keep your engine loaded, pulling, when winding it so as not to blow it. No better way to blow an engine than to wind an engine with no load on it, another reason why I never power shifted.@@moparconnection

    • @budlanctot3060
      @budlanctot3060 6 месяцев назад

      That's odd. My 70 340 6bbl, had a similar distributor, Prestolite dual point, and it came oem with a braided copper ground wire.

    • @stephenwest798
      @stephenwest798 6 месяцев назад

      Don't know what to tell you, but the distributor in my 67 did not have one until I installed one, maybe someone at the factory figured out the same thing I did and yours was a 70 and mine was a 67 and as we all know the factories were always making changes. You're making a big assumption that because your 1970 distributor had one that my 1967 distributor had one.@@budlanctot3060

    • @PiDsPagePrototypes
      @PiDsPagePrototypes 6 месяцев назад

      ​​@@stephenwest798The Hemi will also have piston slap noise when cold too. Did you do the lash the same way us HyperPak Slant blokes do? - While It's Running 😊 Gets perfect lash at operational temperatures, solid cam and lifters (like the 273's had in the 60's) on the stock Slant always sounds like a sewing machine running somewhere under the hood. But once it's right, throttle response is crisp, and the emissions go way down, same with fuel usage out on the freeway. The valve train with correct lash and replacing the stock phenolic cam gear and morse chain with a roller chain and gears on the Slants and the V8's, the valve timing stays perfect, the ignition timing stays perfect, the wear goes away to the point you can run the Lean Burn computer and have it be reliable. Check the lash every couple of filter changes, these things just keep going.

  • @racehemi426425
    @racehemi426425 6 месяцев назад +2

    Remember that is a street Hemi. I'm guessing the race Hemi had more like 600hp

  • @methanial73
    @methanial73 6 месяцев назад +2

    Should've sleeved it so it really was the factory displacement and restored the cylinder strength.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +1

      It had crossed our mind but would’ve doubled the cost of the machining.

    • @EchoSixMike
      @EchoSixMike 6 месяцев назад

      Would have been far better off pulling out useless mass with modern pistons and rods, and not having to further sodomize the crankshaft welding mass back into it. Could have really been money ahead going to 2.200 BBC rods on the crank throws. But I get that it's fun to see what the old junk would do "back when" and it's a cool car, with a resto build engine.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +3

      “Sodomize the crankshaft” - bro, calm down.

    • @tenthousanddays2103
      @tenthousanddays2103 День назад +1

      @@moparconnection 🤣🤣

  • @v.e.7236
    @v.e.7236 3 месяца назад

    I traded a guy a boat for a '70 'Cuda w/ a 383 and one of the factory pistol-grip shifters, that I later found a Hemi for, along w/ one of the cross-ram intake systems Mopar developed specifically for these engines and high performance applications. What a screamer! With two Carter 850 CFM carbs it ran just over 10 second 1/4 miles. My favorite exercise was cruising at 3K-4K RPMs in second gear just to hear that engine sing. Back when I thought everything was replaceable, because I sold that jewel - its replaceable, right? smh

  • @tomstrum6259
    @tomstrum6259 6 месяцев назад +1

    The std Available factory options should've Included something similar to the "Max Wedge" X-ram intake Holleys & properly Cam'd & High domed factory Race version....550hp flywheel Easy.... Would've been a Total game changer Max perf street car....but they Didn't.....

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +1

      There were plenty of options through Direct Connection to hop up the engine once it left the dealership.

  • @SixBarrel
    @SixBarrel 6 месяцев назад +3

    That car is gorgeus , a Cuda in violet 🍻 , that 70 year , the cuda , the road runner the best of plymouth .

  • @ericpederson5291
    @ericpederson5291 6 месяцев назад

    Good video, and fun to see numbers. Why though run not factory compression? If the goal was to show what it could do? I don't know how much you lost but would be some for sure.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +2

      We did. Factory crank, rods and pistons with the identical compression height. The factory was famously inconsistent and this was one example.

  • @mark006868
    @mark006868 6 месяцев назад +1

    Mopar Connection Magazine....In fact, the only way to build a ''numbers matching motor'' for this car was to rebuild the 318 original motor...That is the only way...any other motor won't match...unless you punch new numbers on the replacement motor that you stick in it...

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +1

      At the most anal of definitions, yes you are correct. We mean replicating a DATE-correct build.

  • @jimbetts5164
    @jimbetts5164 12 дней назад

    That was a great video. Your approach was to see if the numbers were realistic and repeatable if everything was left stock, which you have proven to be true. Yes you could have tweeked this etc like so many have done to get maximum #'s, but that wasn't the way you built the engine, so why would you push the new engine beyond what it was meant to do? What I would like to see is follow up stories as the miles get racked up, to see if the reliability is there. So many of the engines were destroyed from drag racing you never saw a 100k mile unmolested survivor still in the origional car for one reason or another. So I assume this car will be driven for all the time and money spent to get it on the road so keep us in the loop please .

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  12 дней назад

      Solid suggestion but the owner of the car didn’t build this to be a driver (sadly). When I build my 572 Hemi then you’ll see us rack us some miles!

  • @billkilbourne6409
    @billkilbourne6409 6 месяцев назад

    Back in the day, insurance company's would not insure a car that had a greater than 1:1 hp/cid ratio. Hence 426 cid, 425 hp

  • @monsieurcommissaire1628
    @monsieurcommissaire1628 6 часов назад +2

    What an absolute legend the Hemi is. But no, not just a legend; the beast really delivered.

    • @soaringvulture
      @soaringvulture 6 часов назад +1

      Absolutely. Not a legend but raw reality. Tons of power in that block of iron.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 часов назад

      👆🏻

  • @idontcare3013
    @idontcare3013 6 месяцев назад

    9.6:1 compression ratio? Street HEMIs were rated at 10.25:1, were they not? The .060 overbore skews results as well. Great effort, though. I think we can all agree that the Elephant, like most engines of the time, was underrated. Thanks, fellers!

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +3

      What was advertised wasn't always what engine builders found to be true in 1970. The machining on original Hemis were atrocious at times; some even found true compression ratios to be under 9:1. The overbore doesn't effect much when we measure the quench to the exact same 75cc as factory stock.

  • @billfeld5883
    @billfeld5883 6 месяцев назад +1

    Best part was these were somebody's daily drivers!!!!!😅😅😅😅😅😅😅

  • @beavis_loves_you
    @beavis_loves_you 3 дня назад

    The 426 hemi sold as a boat motor was rated at 550 horsepower

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  2 дня назад

      Yes and it had very different exhaust and cam profile

  • @powerwagon3731
    @powerwagon3731 6 месяцев назад +1

    Elephant Power!

  • @haroldbirge6881
    @haroldbirge6881 День назад

    🏆The elephant🏆🍀King Kong👀✌️

  • @jimbetts5164
    @jimbetts5164 12 дней назад

    Chrysler was a group that had engineer's who wanted creat vehicles that were the best and executives who wanted to succeed as a buisness and bean counters who only cared about the bottom line and managers stuck in the middle. So they were not the first into racing, it took employees on their own time and money racing for the big wigs to see winning on Sunday sells on Monday for them to green light certain projects.
    Once they got involved in something they were not going to be shown up, so they dove in head first. What they lacked was the follow thru and appropriate time to allow this projects to get off the ground and flourish. Examples are the Winged B bodies for NASCAR and the TA's and AAR E bodies both made in short runs , Daytonas and Superbirds and 340 6 pak challengers and cudas 1 model year each. Even the Hurst Hemi A bodies were one model year as well but those were not built for the street but the same thought process is still there.
    Its like see what we can do ......
    Next short term project please....
    Maybe they had ADD before we knew what that was????

  • @garyrhodes7673
    @garyrhodes7673 3 месяца назад

    People dont realize the StreetHemis were detuned race motors, which dont work real well on the street in daily use. A well tuned stock 440/6 will out run a Hemi half the time. We ran a 64 RaceHemi with aluminum heads and a Hilborn injector system in a steel 37 Willys coupe and it put out way more than 650hp on a basically stock motor (no wild cam or exotic stuff other than the injector and magneto)

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  3 месяца назад

      Oh yeah, worse than that. Street Hemis weighed 812lbs, had lazy hydraulic camshafts and sloppy, misaligned valvetrain. Nothing about them were high performance.

  • @kevinrice7635
    @kevinrice7635 6 месяцев назад

    Seems to know what he's talking about I'm in. My favorite hemi is the 331.

  • @willgallatin2802
    @willgallatin2802 6 месяцев назад

    Honestly the 426 Hemi, and the 440 Magnum are the only 2 engines I've owned that would spin the tires hitting 3rd gear if you were not paying attention to your shifts. Most other engines you need to work at it to make that happen on a stock motor.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  5 месяцев назад

      Amen!

    • @buzzwaldron6195
      @buzzwaldron6195 9 дней назад

      How about a 1962 Olds Jetfire squawking the tires in all 4 gears?:
      ruclips.net/video/Jzw5W1rRMog/видео.html

  • @xeroinfinity
    @xeroinfinity 6 дней назад

    i think back in the day they did typically underrated the HP , for insurance purposes. It really was weird how just a few HP lower could save you money on insurance. But Ive seen 500 hp on a pretty much stock dinosaur Hemi on cheap pump gas. though i wouldnt recommend doing that daily driving. Lol

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 дней назад

      This was an almost perfect stock example and made a little over 450.

  • @vernonslone8627
    @vernonslone8627 2 месяца назад

    Back in those days there was high octane fuel at every gas station....You could run 12 to 1 motors with no issues...

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  2 месяца назад

      That wasn’t because of octane but LEAD content.

    • @vernonslone8627
      @vernonslone8627 2 месяца назад

      @@moparconnection It was always rated in octane because of the higher tetraethyl lead content...Back then 110 was normal....And aviation fuel was 125/145 octane...

  • @fortyshooter1
    @fortyshooter1 8 дней назад

    The 1970-71 Street Hemi had a hydraulic cam with same timing specs as the 69 solid cam...so they say. You could not find a correct hydraulic cam? My brother still has his 1970 Hemicuda he ordered new. I have the original factory hyd. cam which had 10,000 miles on it. I set it up in my lathe and like you checked out the numbers. I got 228 degrees duration at .050 and a gross of 284. Lobe lifts at .309 to .311 I made a dummy lifter of the correct diameter of a stock Hemi lifter and dial indicator off of that.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  8 дней назад

      Find a major camshaft manufacturer that reproduces the original cams. We had to have COMP grind one close to stock.

  • @dennisrobinson8008
    @dennisrobinson8008 6 месяцев назад +1

    With a hot cam and good compression 600hp wouldn't be an issue.

  • @vr6swp
    @vr6swp 2 дня назад

    Pretty sure all the manufacturers played with the HP numbers during the musclecar era, both to sell cars and keep themselves out of the doghouse with insurance companies

  • @matrox
    @matrox 17 дней назад +1

    Those engines were designed to run on 101+ leaded octane fuel.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  17 дней назад

      Find me documentation because I’ve never seen that in my 21 years in this industry

    • @matrox
      @matrox 17 дней назад +2

      @@moparconnection There is no documentation. The Hi-test fuels back then at the pump were 101+ Octane rated and contained lead. Performance cars were designed for Hi-Test.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  16 дней назад

      @@matrox most 3rd party media testing was done with 90/91/93 octane (Motor Trend, Hot Rod, Super Stock, etc.). Rarely did you ever see factory dyno results using 100+ octane - albeit all of these were will leaded, zero ethanol fuels.

    • @matrox
      @matrox 12 дней назад +1

      @@moparconnection I'm not sure what year you are from. Back in the day 60s and early 70s as remember the fuels were leaded from low 90s octane as regular, hi 90s as mid grade then super/hi-test from around 101-104 octane.

  • @sirswerve2493
    @sirswerve2493 6 месяцев назад

    The king of the V8's!

  • @vernonslone8627
    @vernonslone8627 6 месяцев назад

    I believe the factory street hemi had 10.5 to 1 compression to....

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      Advertised, yes. Actually? It was often VERY irregular. Sadly, Chrysler's finish machining on these blocks and heads would sway radically. That's why every good street racer took their apart and remachined them to exact tolerances.

  • @ericfaley9019
    @ericfaley9019 6 месяцев назад

    From all the Dyno videos and posted Dyno tests posted online not all Hemis are created equal. But everyone made the rate 425 hp(=-) @ 5000 rpm. Yes Chrysler sand bagged. Most make at least close to 450(=-) @ 5500. Hemi like to be tuned to make power. There not a slap together engine like the other big block from another manufacturer. That’s why people build the other big block from brand C. You can slap them together and get more power.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      Not necessarily more power but certainly CHEAPER.

  • @alanarmstrong2323
    @alanarmstrong2323 6 месяцев назад +1

    Almost got there but there was a 427 cammer hemi lol

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      Not from Mopar there was. Now if you’re talking about the “Doomsday Machine” it was a 426 DOHC.

    • @alanarmstrong2323
      @alanarmstrong2323 6 месяцев назад

      @@moparconnection Gas Ronda was 1964 world champion in both ahra and nhra driving a mustang with the cammer hemi !

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      Ugh YES, Ford made a semi hemispherical cylinder headed SOHC engine. This is a Mopar channel. We focus on Mopars here.

    • @alanarmstrong2323
      @alanarmstrong2323 6 месяцев назад

      @moparconnection yes so hemi was just not mopar .Smoky Yunick a famous NASCAR tuner also made a 302 Chev hemi

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      🙄 The name “Hemi” is trademarked. We all know it. Stop being pedantic

  • @Randomvoice246
    @Randomvoice246 3 дня назад

    I believe the hemis had 10.25 to 1 compression, higher than your 9.6...

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  3 дня назад +1

      Advertised, yes. But many came out of the factory with much less.

  • @fromthebackofmymind
    @fromthebackofmymind 6 месяцев назад

    Back when these V8's from all big three got about 10 years old, bunches sucked valves from worn out valve springs above 5000rpm. I could buy $50 long blocks for parts from all Detroits big 3.

  • @DortonFarb
    @DortonFarb 6 месяцев назад +1

    Car Life magazine tested the 1966 Satellite with the "425 horsepower" 8-barrel 426 Hemi back when it was new. It ran a best of 14.5 at 95 mph, significantly slower than any base-model 4-cylinder auto trans 2023 Mustang.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +1

      Modern technology!

    • @SgtStedenko1
      @SgtStedenko1 6 месяцев назад +1

      Tires👆. Einstein!! Modern cars have twice the footprint thus better traction than in 1966!!!

    • @DortonFarb
      @DortonFarb 6 месяцев назад

      For a vehicle with a quarter-mile terminal velocity of 95 mph, an ET of 14.5 seconds doesn't indicate a lack of traction. The 95 mph terminal velocity reveals that the 8-barrel "425 horsepower" 426 was in reality making no more than 350 horsepower.

    • @mypronouniswtf5559
      @mypronouniswtf5559 6 месяцев назад +3

      Put 185-70 series bias ply tires on the Mustang with no traction control and it will run 16's...
      Remember old tests were done different..Tracks had no prep like today and they were like racing on a side street or parking lot..In my area it wasnt until the late 90's where the tracks became sticky..Many 0-60 and 1/4 mile tests were done on side streets back then,even in the RAIN and on DIRT roads!!! I have a load of old magazines its comical how they did things then!
      Old slicks of the day had less traction than a modern radial tire on a new minivan!
      Furthermore,its more than the engine new cars have 5-10 speed transmissions and a very low 1st gear thus makes them get going quicker..
      Example a 8 speed Chrysler trans has a 4.71 st gear vs the 727 that has a 2.45 1 st gear...
      If you believe a Hemi only runs 14.5 in the 1/4 by adding the 8 speed trans that would knock 1.5 or even 2 seconds off the time! But Hemi cars ran in the low 12's when you knew how to drive and it was timed good..Slicks and headers they ran upper 11's..I know old timers with old time slips and in the 1980's I even bought low mileage nice cars..Never a Hemi but a 440 would crap all over that 4 banger Stang even with the 2.45 1st gear and 3.23 rear axle ratio in a pre 72 440 car.
      If you think a well tuned full traction Hemi car only runs 14.5 seconds why did people buy anything but a 318 2 barrel? A road test of a 1968 Charger with a 318 2bbl ran 15.80's in the 1/4 mile and upper 7's 0-60!!! How you ask,the Charger 318 hooked and went! If you ever drove a 318 then a 383,440 or 426 Hemi you would understand! A 318 isnt close to those other engines in power/performance but if you have traction then..
      Another example today a Hellcat Challenger is slower than a RAM TRX that has less hp and 7000 lbs ve 4400 lbs,how you ask? The RAM TRX is awd and HOOKS and goes while the Challenger spins and never can hook up!
      Back in 1987 we ran my buddies 4 door 1968 Chrysler Newport 383 2bbl,it felt quick and it ran high 15's bone stock 150,000 mile car! It hooked and went! The 4bbl version of that car spun and had no traction,the 440 cars would burn rubber at 25 mph in a C body! You could drive at 25 mph then floor it it did a John Force burnout..
      Most people dont have the experience I had...One Uncle is the original owner of a 70 Cuda 440 6 barrel(87 years old) my other Uncle owned a Chrysler-Plymouth dealer from 1950's to 1990's...We drove all types of Mopars and Ford/GM/Import trade ins,he had them all..454 Chevelles to Porsche 911's..
      Hell a 360 4bbl Cuda ran low 14's in the 1/4 mile,so a Hemi is way quicker than 14.5..True many people didnt have the carbs set or linkage right even new some were messed up,but mainly zero traction with the 185 bias ply tires! Wide Tread was only 205 60 series back then!

    • @crazyoilfieldmechanic3195
      @crazyoilfieldmechanic3195 День назад

      ​@DortonFarb A stock 66 Satellite weighed 3940 lbs , much heavier than the later cars and a 14.50 should be 98 mph indicating 290 flywheel horsepower. Obviously there was something wrong with that car.

  • @markae0
    @markae0 6 месяцев назад +1

    What was your timing?

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      As I recall we were at 20 initial and 38 all in.

  • @elektro3000
    @elektro3000 6 месяцев назад

    Wasn't the stock Street Hemi set up at 10.25:1 compression? Sounds like that head gasket may have been a little thicker than necessary.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +2

      Please see the other times we address this in other comments.

  • @mikebennett703
    @mikebennett703 6 месяцев назад

    Back in the 60's and early 70's those hemi engines were designed to run on pure 100 octane gas with no ethanol or emissions additives. Low 90 / 93 octane was considered regular back then. Not bad considering we have inferior gas nowadays compared to back then.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +1

      Leaded gas made the biggest difference

    • @mikebennett703
      @mikebennett703 6 месяцев назад

      @@moparconnection Absolutely. Leaded gasoline although bad for the environment, was great for engines without hardened valve seats and catalytic converters. Pure gas is not watered down with a percentage of alcohol or alcohol cosolvents / MTBE etc. Leaded gasoline falls into the "pure" description because it too wasn't watered down.

    • @cdglasser
      @cdglasser 5 месяцев назад +1

      The octane rating back then was the research octane. Now it is the average of the research and motor octane, and motor is about 10 points lower than research. 100 octane gas in 1970 is equivalent to about 95 octane now, so higher than the 91-93 that you can typically get at the pump today, but not as much higher as you might have thought.

    • @DavidPhillips-rs5dq
      @DavidPhillips-rs5dq 3 месяца назад

      Ethanol adds hp generally as it is carrying extra oxygen into the mixture... sort of like adding a small shot of nitrous

    • @El_Peto
      @El_Peto День назад +1

      Yeah and a 98 camaro could outrun a stock hemi from the 60s on that fuel so

  • @VinnyMartello
    @VinnyMartello День назад

    I have nothing against clones/tributes. There are only so many factory big block super sports/rt’s/cobras in the world.

  • @Steverinomeister
    @Steverinomeister 6 месяцев назад +1

    it’s not Plum Crazy Purple. It’s Plum Crazy. Okay I edited this because my first post was rude I apologize.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +1

      Actually it’s “Plum Crazy Metallic.” If you’re gonna correct someone, you gotta do it right.

    • @Steverinomeister
      @Steverinomeister 6 месяцев назад

      @@moparconnection check the books I am correct

    • @damianlindsey6177
      @damianlindsey6177 6 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@moparconnectionand at the end of the day it is still purple. Call a color anything you want but the light spectrum doesn't lie lol. I always liked the plum crazy, and pink out of all the colors. If I was able to buy one it'd be a pink gtx with a white interior. Killer combo.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +2

      Sorry Steve, all official Chrysler pamphlets and manuals list FC7 as “Plum Crazy Metallic.” I literally wrote the book on this.

    • @Steverinomeister
      @Steverinomeister 6 месяцев назад

      @@moparconnection yeah I know I’m wrong about the metallic part sorry for being so snarky I’m building a 63 Dodge 330 2 door sedan max wedge tribute, that Cuda is really beautiful

  • @darrellsomers5427
    @darrellsomers5427 6 месяцев назад

    With 2 4 BBL carbs you could get a 396 with one carb that made over 425 horse power ,no 440 ever did that

  • @PiDsPagePrototypes
    @PiDsPagePrototypes 6 месяцев назад

    Chrysler has ALWAYS understated the numbers on Every(!) engine that left the factory. There's two reasons for this, first is MoPar engineers like to go fast. Second is, no one, ever, can sue them for false advertising on the engine power.
    Doesn't matter if it was a baby Slant, Minivan V6, Neon 4 or fire breathing Hemi V8, they ALL had more power and torque then the stat sheet claims.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      Hmm... it wasn't due to people being litigious in the 1960s and 70s but insurance companies and the federal government.

    • @PiDsPagePrototypes
      @PiDsPagePrototypes 2 часа назад

      ​​@@moparconnection "No one",... includes Da Gubermint,... ;)
      ( Smiles in Slant Six HyperPak VC Valiant )

  • @ericstites9470
    @ericstites9470 6 месяцев назад

    Factory Hemi compression in 1970 was 10.25:1. You're leaving power on the table.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад +1

      Please read where we answered this like 12 times before

  • @TOBYH
    @TOBYH 2 месяца назад

    I SEEMED TO HEAR A VERY LOUD TICKING, VALVES ? AFTER THE PULL. DID I HEAR CORRECTLY?

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  2 месяца назад

      Admittedly the audio equipment I used wasn’t very good. It picked up a lot of noise that was distorted. The Hemi ran great.

  • @dbc105
    @dbc105 6 месяцев назад

    That should be plentry for a street engine.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      For most yes

    • @davidcross4815
      @davidcross4815 6 месяцев назад

      It's never enough !
      My '15 Hellcat challenger put 678 to the wheels !

  • @VGHCX
    @VGHCX 6 месяцев назад

    Did Chrysler give a net or gross horsepower rating?

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      After 1971 all of the Big 3 changed how they reported horsepower as to help keep the insurance companies off of their backs.

  • @mcm95403
    @mcm95403 5 часов назад

    10.25 is stock compression, you're .75 of a point low. Why not just a new cam instead of running an unknown?

  • @joe-pm3lb
    @joe-pm3lb 6 месяцев назад +1

    oh it made the 425 hp and more lol they under rated them, well until insurance company did there own test

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      Lots of sneaky stuff was happening in those days

    • @soaringvulture
      @soaringvulture 6 часов назад

      They made 425 hp just fine but they still had 1000 RPM left for more.

  • @frosthoe
    @frosthoe 3 часа назад

    They all made MORE power then claimed. Factory Horsepower ratings are not the actual maximum torque and horsepower produced! They are the maximum sustainable power output and also heavily dictated by the COOLING SYSTEM capacity before overheating...From ecxess power output...get it? Many engines are actually far more powerful then rated.. They are just limited because of thermals. Best wishes.

  • @normmcrae1140
    @normmcrae1140 3 дня назад

    Nick Panaritis of Nick's Garage (www.youtube.com/@NicksGarage/videos) Dyno-tested a BONE-STOCK 426 Hemi set to Factory specs and it pushed out 490+ hp....
    ruclips.net/video/QB7Iug0ILAY/видео.htmlsi=oUT7CXzLf_0m9KqO

  • @tomstrum6259
    @tomstrum6259 7 дней назад

    Your 0.060" Over puts you near 440 cubes...My personal New car (With 4.10 Dana gear) experience, 1970 Factory hemi usually arrived 173 cc's heads & the way Down in the hole deck Height put the typical Actual measured CR at 'bout 9.0 :1 CR....The Factory as Delivered 1970 juice lifter Hydraulic cam literally Stops making Rpm (Like an rpm Limiter) at 5200 Rpm in high gear....Pre--1970 factory Solid cam engines (Like your Test engine example) have the usual >5200 Rpm gradual Tapered power roll--off curve....The Average as Delivered factory 1970 hemi (13.5 Et/105 mph) strong but Not quite good as your Solid lifter version...Too bad Chrysler took their fine Highly developed 570 hp Factory race hemi & Castrated De-tuned it (Very low CR + Small low Lift, short Duration cam) Down to the Crippled (Potentially capable) Lame fixed Single option Production version....Is as it Is (was) for a factory Homologation only engine...Imagine a Serious effort '69 A10 Equivalent (Liftoff 'glass pinned Hood, >11:1 CR, big Solid (>300°) Cam, Cross-Ram dual Holley intake, 3500 Stall) Available option Package.....Serious Factory "Domination" performance level street Threat !!....

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  7 дней назад

      Hmm, not terribly close but I get your point. Unfortunately, we didn’t have a virgin iron block to start with nor did we want to sleeve it.

    • @tomstrum6259
      @tomstrum6259 6 дней назад

      Yeah, The over-bore 11 cubes prob 12 hp extra over factory.... Compared to original solid cam, the new '70 hydraulic engine lays down past 5200 under load in high gear more noticeable than the previous version....

  • @gordyowens9570
    @gordyowens9570 6 месяцев назад

    They claim it was closer to 500 HP

  • @anybody370
    @anybody370 6 месяцев назад

    9.6 compression ration is below factory spec

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      Come on, man. You MUST’VE already seen the two dozen times we’ve addressed this topic in the comments section already.

  • @BigBlockChevrolet
    @BigBlockChevrolet 20 часов назад +1

    My Buddy said that his Uncle knows a man that his brother had a 426 hemi that made 700 horse power.

  • @uhfnutbar1
    @uhfnutbar1 6 месяцев назад

    425 that what it made to do

  • @dadgarage7966
    @dadgarage7966 2 дня назад

    Confirm is a better word, not prove.

  • @buildingracingvideos4714
    @buildingracingvideos4714 6 месяцев назад

    Pretty sore hemis were 10.25 to 1

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  6 месяцев назад

      Advertised, yes. But bad machining work left many less than that.

  • @rogerdavis4272
    @rogerdavis4272 9 часов назад

    All the horsepower numbers from the 60's and 70's are lowballed (for insurance and other reasons). Everyone knows this.

  • @joestevens-hm7uh
    @joestevens-hm7uh 8 часов назад

    I will tune myself bad hairpiece

  • @VinnyMartello
    @VinnyMartello День назад +1

    400hp is all you’ll ever need for a street driven classic.

    • @moparconnection
      @moparconnection  22 часа назад +1

      Ooh you take that kind of negativity right out of here!

    • @ronniegibson8577
      @ronniegibson8577 10 часов назад

      ​@@moparconnectionthere is NEVER too much power on a street driven car!!