<blockquote>quote:</font><hr> i don't agree with you about the costs being worth it. we are talking abotu a built up stock does not apply here.
teh sbc has a ton of great stuff available, jsut like the big block.
my two gripes about teh big blaock will always be the cost of parts and the weight of the finished product.
racing in general relies a lot on a good power to weight ratio, and the dollar per hp is always a limiting factor. if you pick up an LS1 for a few thousand bucks, do a mild rebuild with a custom cam and throw a turbo on top you will fly and be carry prolly 200 lbs less than a big block making the same power.
big inches do make big torque, that is true. but boost on smaller cubes can make a more linear torque curve, shich is where the best acceleration comes from.
shifting an LS1 past 6000 is no big deal, guys do it forever on stock bottom ends all the time. with 10-12 psi you can put a very mild LS1 motor well over 500hp and 500ft/lbs. all it takes to go way above that woudl be a bit more aggressive cam selection, aftermarket heads(patriot has very good ones at good prices) and an intake upgrade.
if you wanna compare the race abilities of both maybe you can head to atco soemtime. there is a guy who always runs no time with a turbo'ed 377 small block, yes it is one of those horrible factory cast 400 blocks with a 350 crank in it. one day in the lanes he left his timeslip on the seat, it said 8.92 on it.
any block small or big can be made to spin up perfectly reliably. it is time for a lot fo people to accept some technology and start backing off the big inch mentality a bit.
don't get me wrong, big blocks are cool as hell. drivign street ones is sweet, great burnouts and they pull good. but for racing the advanatage is in the high tech small blocks court.
motor either way, so worrying about stock for
later
tim
<hr></blockquote>
im not talking about with power adders here, if that why dont you put a turbo on a big block?? they dont cost that much more and the extra power they make(especially with aftermarket heads) will without a doubt make up for the weight, my dad has a customer that has a NA 377 w/brodix track 1 heads and all the good 4340 forged parts and he runs stock 400 blocks with splayed steel main caps and theres no tellin how many blocks hes cracked and tore up, and if you wanna talk about ET's my dads NA 509 ci BBC made 925hp and 707ft lb of torque on the dyno with one carburetor, conventional 24* BBC brodix 2x heads and an edelbrock 454-R intake, it ran a 8.37@161 in 5000' DA air,
<blockquote>quote:</font><hr> LS1 for a few thousand bucks, do a mild rebuild with a custom cam and throw a turbo on top you will fly and be carry prolly 200 lbs less than a big block making the same power.
<hr></blockquote>
why couldnt u go buy a stock big block out of a junkyard and put a turbo??? what would that do??
my dad has told me about when he was in college he had a 68 camaro with a 327, 4 speed, cam, headers, gears, typical mods and he said it ran mid 13's which is pretty quick, then he said he built up a 68 camaro w/a 427ci big block, he supposedly "ported" his own heads(which he had no idea what he was doing since it was his first time) and had the cheapest stuff possible in the motor, cast pistons, some $20 cast iron rings, cheap machine work, and in that car w/a TH350 tranny, 3.73's, a 800 carb, and stock TC he ran a mid 12's at 1000 less RPMS and 200 lbs more weight, now tell me NA for NA a big block isnt better, and that motor was a serious POS...
[ January 21, 2004: Message edited by: WickEdSix9838 ]</p>
teh sbc has a ton of great stuff available, jsut like the big block.
my two gripes about teh big blaock will always be the cost of parts and the weight of the finished product.
racing in general relies a lot on a good power to weight ratio, and the dollar per hp is always a limiting factor. if you pick up an LS1 for a few thousand bucks, do a mild rebuild with a custom cam and throw a turbo on top you will fly and be carry prolly 200 lbs less than a big block making the same power.
big inches do make big torque, that is true. but boost on smaller cubes can make a more linear torque curve, shich is where the best acceleration comes from.
shifting an LS1 past 6000 is no big deal, guys do it forever on stock bottom ends all the time. with 10-12 psi you can put a very mild LS1 motor well over 500hp and 500ft/lbs. all it takes to go way above that woudl be a bit more aggressive cam selection, aftermarket heads(patriot has very good ones at good prices) and an intake upgrade.
if you wanna compare the race abilities of both maybe you can head to atco soemtime. there is a guy who always runs no time with a turbo'ed 377 small block, yes it is one of those horrible factory cast 400 blocks with a 350 crank in it. one day in the lanes he left his timeslip on the seat, it said 8.92 on it.
any block small or big can be made to spin up perfectly reliably. it is time for a lot fo people to accept some technology and start backing off the big inch mentality a bit.
don't get me wrong, big blocks are cool as hell. drivign street ones is sweet, great burnouts and they pull good. but for racing the advanatage is in the high tech small blocks court.
motor either way, so worrying about stock for
later
tim
<hr></blockquote>
im not talking about with power adders here, if that why dont you put a turbo on a big block?? they dont cost that much more and the extra power they make(especially with aftermarket heads) will without a doubt make up for the weight, my dad has a customer that has a NA 377 w/brodix track 1 heads and all the good 4340 forged parts and he runs stock 400 blocks with splayed steel main caps and theres no tellin how many blocks hes cracked and tore up, and if you wanna talk about ET's my dads NA 509 ci BBC made 925hp and 707ft lb of torque on the dyno with one carburetor, conventional 24* BBC brodix 2x heads and an edelbrock 454-R intake, it ran a 8.37@161 in 5000' DA air,
<blockquote>quote:</font><hr> LS1 for a few thousand bucks, do a mild rebuild with a custom cam and throw a turbo on top you will fly and be carry prolly 200 lbs less than a big block making the same power.
<hr></blockquote>
why couldnt u go buy a stock big block out of a junkyard and put a turbo??? what would that do??
my dad has told me about when he was in college he had a 68 camaro with a 327, 4 speed, cam, headers, gears, typical mods and he said it ran mid 13's which is pretty quick, then he said he built up a 68 camaro w/a 427ci big block, he supposedly "ported" his own heads(which he had no idea what he was doing since it was his first time) and had the cheapest stuff possible in the motor, cast pistons, some $20 cast iron rings, cheap machine work, and in that car w/a TH350 tranny, 3.73's, a 800 carb, and stock TC he ran a mid 12's at 1000 less RPMS and 200 lbs more weight, now tell me NA for NA a big block isnt better, and that motor was a serious POS...
[ January 21, 2004: Message edited by: WickEdSix9838 ]</p>
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