Big horsepower 318 builds

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I'm looking forward to the recipe for a 500 hp 318 NA at 6200- 7000 rpm. lol and street friendly. :lol:
Now you are adding things.... the OP didn't say a word about street friendly. In fact, he said gas or alcohol. :poke:
 
Got a line on another 318 Roller Engine, may have to go check this out this weekend.

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Went to take a look at the 318 Roller Engine today. No Joy, turns out to be a V6 advertised as a 318 V8.

Something did not look right very first thing, "That's a V6", took a breaker bar to the crank and would not turn over.
Froze Up, Pass . . .

The guy felt bad that he did not know the difference. Covered my gas money for the round trip out.

Win some, lose some.

It did have the 904, lockup overdrive trans from the '91 Dakota 2 wheel drive truck that is probably still good, with torque converter. $100 bucks package deal engine trans, and mini starter.

If anyone wants the overdrive trans for their A Body, PM me and I can give you the guy's number. Near Albert Lea MN

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20200815_144456.jpg
 
Went to take a look at the 318 Roller Engine today. No Joy, turns out to be a V6 advertised as a 318 V8.

Something did not look right very first thing, "That's a V6", took a breaker bar to the crank and would not turn over.
Froze Up, Pass . . .

The guy felt bad that he did not know the difference. Covered my gas money for the round trip out.

Win some, lose some.

It did have the 904, lockup overdrive trans from the '91 Dakota 2 wheel drive truck that is probably still good, with torque converter. $100 bucks package deal engine trans, and mini starter.

If anyone wants the overdrive trans for their A Body, PM me and I can give you the guy's number. Near Albert Lea MN

View attachment 1715578715

View attachment 1715578716
you can be thankful he covered the gas at least
 
you can be thankful he covered the gas at least

He was a nice guy, his grandson was there to help, he showed me around of what he had, kind of like "American Pickers", it was a nice day for a drive.

Also learned some more about Mopar V6 Stuff. Had the "Mini 302 Close Chamber Heads" on that V6. And the stock roller cam had a lift of .417/.417 Intake and exhaust, pretty good for a stock roller cam. More than likely had the good 9.2:1 flat top pistons and the full floating rods in it too.

My '91 318 roller engine has the full floating rods.

Screenshot_20200815-162146_Chrome.jpg
 
How about a discussion about a naturally aspirated, no nitrous, stock stroke, 318 on gas or alcohol. I have read quite a few posts lately about 500+ horse teens that I find hard to believe.
and there are some that can do it under 7000 rpm. :rofl:
 
He was a nice guy, his grandson was there to help, he showed me around of what he had, kind of like "American Pickers", it was a nice day for a drive.

Also learned some more about Mopar V6 Stuff. Had the "Mini 302 Close Chamber Heads" on that V6. And the stock roller cam had a lift of .417/.417 Intake and exhaust, pretty good for a stock roller cam. More than likely had the good 9.2:1 flat top pistons and the full floating rods in it too.

My '91 318 roller engine has the full floating rods.

View attachment 1715578717
Yep just like the 302's. When the Magnum's came out the v6 heads were just like the v8 Magnums.
 
Maybe. I’m not a fan of the track. In fact, I hate going to the track. To the point if I never go again I wouldn’t care.

Without a time slip to back it up a dyno sheet is just a piece of paper with numbers on it. You've heard the old saying, "we don't race dynos".
 
Anyone who uses the dyno with dyno headers, ignition, carb and all that is wasting their time and money. If you are running a mechanical fuel pump you should be using that too, along with the alternator and water pump too.

With the heads available (the W2 has been around for decades and those heads will EASILY make 500 HP on a 318 or anything else) like the TF stuff that 500 HP is like oatmeal. It’s easy to do.

Never said it’s impossible. I said it never happens and the owners always bullshit their way through not running numbers an actual street car type 500hp 318 should run. Any claims to it need a weight and a mph or it’s a load of ****. Just that simple.
Like Mr Porter said- either guys don’t have the cash or won’t spend it on a teen build. Those with the means build from a better core.
 
Never said it’s impossible. I said it never happens and the owners always bullshit their way through not running numbers an actual street car type 500hp 318 should run. Any claims to it need a weight and a mph or it’s a load of ****. Just that simple.
Like Mr Porter said- either guys don’t have the cash or won’t spend it on a teen build. Those with the means build from a better core.


If you run it on the with the accessories hooked up, then the numbers are correct, as long as you correct for weather conditions.

All the bullshit of needing a time slip is just that...bullshit. A dyno is a tool, and used correctly will give accurate results.
 


What’s the difference? I made 545 at 5200 with a 408 on hydraulic rollers. It would have made close to 600 if the customer would have switched to solid lifters and used a cam to make power to say...6500. That wasn’t a hard build either. A basic 408. The hard part was getting the owner off the internet and to stop listening to the internet hero’s, which at that time I had no idea this **** even existed.

So...I can take the very same heads, stick them on a 318 with equal compression and a cam with timing for the smaller displacement and make the same power as the 408. It just won’t do it at a John Deere RPM, nor will it be at Comp Eliminator RPM.

Of course, that engine doesn’t count because there are no time slips for it, but it was with the carb, ignition, headers and water pump he was using.
 
Without a time slip to back it up a dyno sheet is just a piece of paper with numbers on it. You've heard the old saying, "we don't race dynos".

It has been a few years since I had one of my own, but isn't a time slip "just a piece of paper with numbers on it"?
 
This seems to be my point this is basically a filled block with no alternator possibly an electric water pump and fuel pump for a dedicated purpose only this would be a very very special build for a very one only purpose...
 
Never got this only the track can tell your real hp, for one the formulas to do so probably where figured out in the first place by a mix of dyno and track results so who knows the accuracy of any of those formulas and you can't verify them if you can't trust dyno results. Second your only gonna get accurate results if your car is setup to take advantaged of every last hp, or otherwise is only given you a results of the hp your using. Obviously how your car performs in the real world matters more than a dyno but then again most don't even race their cars on the track so for most it's subjective on what is the best build setup for them.
 
What’s the difference? I made 545 at 5200 with a 408 on hydraulic rollers. It would have made close to 600 if the customer would have switched to solid lifters and used a cam to make power to say...6500. That wasn’t a hard build either. A basic 408. The hard part was getting the owner off the internet and to stop listening to the internet hero’s, which at that time I had no idea this **** even existed.

So...I can take the very same heads, stick them on a 318 with equal compression and a cam with timing for the smaller displacement and make the same power as the 408. It just won’t do it at a John Deere RPM, nor will it be at Comp Eliminator RPM.

Of course, that engine doesn’t count because there are no time slips for it, but it was with the carb, ignition, headers and water pump he was using.

HP per CI for the 408 is 1.33
HP per CI for the 323 is 1.54. 323 is on account of a 30 over 318.

Not that big of a difference if you know what you are doing.
 
HP per CI for the 408 is 1.33
HP per CI for the 323 is 1.54. 323 is on account of a 30 over 318.

Not that big of a difference if you know what you are doing.
The difference will be in the rpm, I don't care how you slice it , 1.54 hp per cube with a 323 will need rpm
 
HP per CI for the 408 is 1.33
HP per CI for the 323 is 1.54. 323 is on account of a 30 over 318.

Not that big of a difference if you know what you are doing.


I know your not saying this but I think hp/cid is where people get screwed up thinking it's hard for small engines to make power.

Just cause say 1.6 hp/cid is hard for a large engine doesn't necessarily mean the same for smaller engines, cylinder head is the main part for any desired hp level.

We know a fully ported /6 head can make about 300 hp so a 170 /6 making a 1.6 hp/cid for 260 hp isn't out of realm of possibility using nothing overly tricky than mainly reworked factory parts now a 543 stroker big block is gonna require a little more than a ported out 440 head to make 1.6 hp/cid for 870 hp and be a fully custom build.

There's a bunch of heads that can support 500hp in a 3.91-3.97 bore the only slightly tricky thing is getting the valve train to work at 7000-8000+ rpm.
 
Nothing like a discussion with extremely loose directions LOL..
I've been waiting for someone to post up a basic recipe for a 500 hp 318 @ 6200 - 7000 rpm.
I hear it's easy. :lol:
 
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