Super/Engine blocks
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From: Palm Bay, Florida, USA
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Super/Engine blocks
Friend told me he saw a supercharger from a 96 V-6 Camaro sell on Ebay today.............? First off, a 96 is a 3.8 right? Is the 3.8 the same block as our 2.8/3.1? He says yeah but I'm inclined to disagree. Also...do the 305's, 350's, and small block 400's all share the same block?
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From: Palm Bay, Florida, USA
Car: 95 E-150 & 07 Kawasaki ZX-6R
Engine: A slow one & a fast one
Transmission: A bad one & a good one
Axle/Gears: A weak one & a chained one
Didnt even think about that..good..I'm right! Alright then..what about the 305's, 350's, and 400's..he claims those are all the same block too. He's buying a small block 400 to put in his 84 T/A.
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From: BFE, MD
Car: 13 Ram 1500/ 78 Formy
Engine: 5.7 / 7.4
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Axle/Gears: 3.55 posi / 3.23
is he getting the whole engine or just the block? if just the short block, he will either need to:
a) get 400 heads for it
or
b) have steam holes drilled into the 305/350 heads.
and yes, there is/are kits for the 4th gen 3.8 cars, even one on the way for the 3.4 . hint hint
a) get 400 heads for it
or
b) have steam holes drilled into the 305/350 heads.
and yes, there is/are kits for the 4th gen 3.8 cars, even one on the way for the 3.4 . hint hint
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From: Palm Bay, Florida, USA
Car: 95 E-150 & 07 Kawasaki ZX-6R
Engine: A slow one & a fast one
Transmission: A bad one & a good one
Axle/Gears: A weak one & a chained one
I think he's getting new 400 heads, and he's porting and polishing them...
hey,
the 305, 350, 400 blocks are different. they all look the same from the outside, but have different bore sizes. This is what determines the displacement (along with crank stroke, etc). There is no way anyone could bore out a 305 to a 350, and no way to bore out a 350 to a 400. You can tell apart a 400 from a 305-350, by checking if it's got three freeze plugs on each side of the block. That's the most common way to tell them apart.
the 305, 350, 400 blocks are different. they all look the same from the outside, but have different bore sizes. This is what determines the displacement (along with crank stroke, etc). There is no way anyone could bore out a 305 to a 350, and no way to bore out a 350 to a 400. You can tell apart a 400 from a 305-350, by checking if it's got three freeze plugs on each side of the block. That's the most common way to tell them apart.
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Joined: Jul 2001
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From: Palm Bay, Florida, USA
Car: 95 E-150 & 07 Kawasaki ZX-6R
Engine: A slow one & a fast one
Transmission: A bad one & a good one
Axle/Gears: A weak one & a chained one
Thanks for the info... FYI..what's the most you can bore and stroke a 350 out to? I've heard 392 somewhere... And how about a 305? 347 stroker? (Or is that a Ford motor..I really don't remember anymore....damn short term memory loss)
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not too sure about the 350, but it should be around that area, as for the 305, PowerHouse sells a stroker kit which can put 335ci.
about the boring, i've heard that over .060 should be the max a block can be safely bored out to. Oh and 347 is Ford. glad i could provide some info.
about the boring, i've heard that over .060 should be the max a block can be safely bored out to. Oh and 347 is Ford. glad i could provide some info.
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From: Palm Bay, Florida, USA
Car: 95 E-150 & 07 Kawasaki ZX-6R
Engine: A slow one & a fast one
Transmission: A bad one & a good one
Axle/Gears: A weak one & a chained one
Alright..thanks man. I had that feeling about the 347.. I hang out with too many d*mned Ford people in the morning..only person that likes Chevy besides me in the group is John, who drives a Saturn...which is basically a GM car... Lol. As for now, I'm the GM flagship in the group.. Sad eh?
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From: Permian Basin
Car: 82 Camaro Z28
Engine: LU5 - Crossfire 305
Transmission: 200c - 3 Speed Automatic
bore | stroke
xxxxxx 3.00" 3.25" 3.48" 3.75"
3.736" 263 .. 285 .. 305 .. 329
3.875" 283 .. 307 .. 328 .. 354
4.000" 302 .. 327 .. 350 .. 372
4.125" 321 .. 347 .. 372 .. 400
305 engine 3.48" stroke & 3.736" bore
334 (305 stroked and bored) 3.75" stroke & 3.766" bore
350 engine 3.48" stroke & 4.000" bore
383 engine (350 stroked and bored) 3.75" stroke & 4.030" bore
i hope this helps

-mike (loomdog)
xxxxxx 3.00" 3.25" 3.48" 3.75"
3.736" 263 .. 285 .. 305 .. 329
3.875" 283 .. 307 .. 328 .. 354
4.000" 302 .. 327 .. 350 .. 372
4.125" 321 .. 347 .. 372 .. 400
305 engine 3.48" stroke & 3.736" bore
334 (305 stroked and bored) 3.75" stroke & 3.766" bore
350 engine 3.48" stroke & 4.000" bore
383 engine (350 stroked and bored) 3.75" stroke & 4.030" bore
i hope this helps

-mike (loomdog)
Last edited by loomdog32; Dec 3, 2002 at 08:05 AM.
Originally posted by Z-Man 85
hey,
the 305, 350, 400 blocks are different. they all look the same from the outside, but have different bore sizes. This is what determines the displacement (along with crank stroke, etc). There is no way anyone could bore out a 305 to a 350, and no way to bore out a 350 to a 400. You can tell apart a 400 from a 305-350, by checking if it's got three freeze plugs on each side of the block. That's the most common way to tell them apart.
hey,
the 305, 350, 400 blocks are different. they all look the same from the outside, but have different bore sizes. This is what determines the displacement (along with crank stroke, etc). There is no way anyone could bore out a 305 to a 350, and no way to bore out a 350 to a 400. You can tell apart a 400 from a 305-350, by checking if it's got three freeze plugs on each side of the block. That's the most common way to tell them apart.
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Supreme Member
Joined: Jul 2001
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From: Palm Bay, Florida, USA
Car: 95 E-150 & 07 Kawasaki ZX-6R
Engine: A slow one & a fast one
Transmission: A bad one & a good one
Axle/Gears: A weak one & a chained one
Loom...are those the maximum safe bore and stroke #'s for each engine?
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From: Permian Basin
Car: 82 Camaro Z28
Engine: LU5 - Crossfire 305
Transmission: 200c - 3 Speed Automatic
Originally posted by pontiacguy1
The numbers he gave are with a .030 inch overbore. Someone up above said it earlier... for a reliable street engine that doesn't overheat, .060 is about it for a small block chevy.
The numbers he gave are with a .030 inch overbore. Someone up above said it earlier... for a reliable street engine that doesn't overheat, .060 is about it for a small block chevy.
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From: Palm Bay, Florida, USA
Car: 95 E-150 & 07 Kawasaki ZX-6R
Engine: A slow one & a fast one
Transmission: A bad one & a good one
Axle/Gears: A weak one & a chained one
.080 over? Christ....that's just..scary....
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From: Permian Basin
Car: 82 Camaro Z28
Engine: LU5 - Crossfire 305
Transmission: 200c - 3 Speed Automatic
one of the .080" rebuilds is in a 67 silverado 4x4.. that truck can, will, and has pulled many stumps.. it belonged to a friend of mine dads that used to race at the local oval tracks (1/3 mile.. madera raceway).. it was traded for a 70 elky ss w/ 454.. the truck went 10k miles after trade w/ no maintaince and engine blew, overheated (250k @ rebuild, 136k after rebuild).. if u maintain it, it will last forever!!
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