Not my piston/pictures. I don’t believe I have pictures of mine which were not so dramatically disfigured, but still trashed.Did you happen to cut one of those apart and measure crown thickness?
Not my piston/pictures. I don’t believe I have pictures of mine which were not so dramatically disfigured, but still trashed.Did you happen to cut one of those apart and measure crown thickness?
Not my piston/pictures. I don’t believe I have pictures of mine which were not so dramatically disfigured, but still trashed.
Cool. I think you’re putting together a nice little fun streeter. My advice is the same as above. Use the stock magnum piston and bottom end, put good hardware in it, rod bolts and main bolts. It’ll be more than sufficient for what you’re doing. If you want to do machine work and have to have a forged piston, do some math to set the compression ratio where you want it. Rarely does an off the shelf piston make the compression number they advertise. You can safely target 9.2-9.5 on 93 if you know how to set the timing up. In fact I wouldn’t want to build it at 8:1 it’ll be lazy off boost and that’s no fun in a street car.I plan to be able to run 93 octane which is pump gas here. Build will obviously be very mild. My goal: Gutsy punchy RELIABLE street only engine in my 95 2wd Dakota. No strip. Summer toy. Edelbrock 650 cfm carb (AVS Series) 727 with RMVB- appropriate stall, and eventually 3:55ish ring and pinion. 1st gen Magnum larger outlet exh manifolds with dual exhaust and inexpensive Walker Turbo mufflers.
View attachment 1716440940
I certainly wouldn’t consider aftermarket cast pistons, hypereutectic I might consider if that’s all I could find, but if you’re in there boring and replacing stuff you might as well use a forged piston. I use Mahle whenever I can. But I’ve also used DSS and Icon with no problemsThanks TT5..9. If my core needs an overbore what cast or hypereutectic pistons are equivalent in quality and available for replacements?
That’s a 360 piston with a 1.667 comp height. I used it as an example. If you use that in a shorter deck magnum you’ll have the piston out of the bore and lots of comp. You’ll have to look up mag pistons in 1.605 comp height.I like the price of the DSS piston set .
Got itThat’s a 360 piston with a 1.667 comp height. I used it as an example. If you use that in a shorter deck magnum you’ll have the piston out of the bore and lots of comp. You’ll have to look up mag pistons in 1.605 comp height.
Call the manufacturer of whatever piston you choose. Most piston companies will make one or two changes to a shelf piston before they consider it a custom piston. Ask em if they can move the compression height around to where you want it. Be aware though at 1.605 the stock magnum pistons (that I’ve measured) come in at 050-055 below deck on stock magnum blocks.Got it
I think it’s right. Did I fubar some numbers?That can’t be right? 1.667 comp height is zero deck on a stock stroke magnum. That’s exactly what I’m running.
(3.58/2)+6.123+1.667
Magnum deck height is 9.58
It’s correct. The only discrepancy Ive found is the compression height listed as 1.612 on multiple pages. Either way when using an LA piston (1.667) in a mag block it will be proud of the deck a bit. .008-.011 with nominal numbers.That can’t be right? 1.667 comp height is zero deck on a stock stroke magnum. That’s exactly what I’m running.
(3.58/2)+6.123+1.667
Magnum deck height is 9.58
BMR4200-030 CP Pistons, Bullet SB Chrysler, 4.030 Bore, 9.0:1Lowest off the shelf I've seen is the Carillo Bullet pistons P/N: BMR-4200-030.
That’s a great piston. Wonder what their opinion would be for mild boosted (5-15psi) applications.BMR4200-030 CP Pistons, Bullet SB Chrysler, 4.030 Bore, 9.0:1
1.645CH
9:1CR @62cc head chamber
OP, how many CC’s are your heads?
Im looking at running ported stock Magnum headsBMR4200-030 CP Pistons, Bullet SB Chrysler, 4.030 Bore, 9.0:1
1.645CH
9:1CR @62cc head chamber
OP, how many CC’s are your heads?
I could do that but I actually want to spend some money on a nicely done 360 engine. At 56 with my kids grown and gone and now some disposable income I'd like to do what I've not been able to afford to do in the past, and I want to do it right. I'm not afraid to spend some $$. Plus the 318 mag currently in may Dakota has 235,000 miles on it. The core 360 Mag I obtained is out of my brothers Ram and has 300,000 miles on it! It still ran good but consumed oil. Got it for free.Hmm, why not just bolt the blower onto a stock Magnum engine?
I know you’re doing a mild build, but for not very much more money you could get a complete stroker rotating assembly from scat, balanced and ready to basically set bearing clearance, and drop in. Put your ported magnum heads on it for now and have plenty of room for improvement later if you choose. It’ll be a torque monster. The blower and heads become a big limitation at that point though. Down the rabbit hole we go.I could do that but I actually want to spend some money on a nicely done 360 engine. At 56 with my kids grown and gone and now some disposable income I'd like to do what I've not been able to afford to do in the past, and I want to do it right. I'm not afraid to spend some $$. Plus the 318 mag currently in may Dakota has 235,000 miles on it. The core 360 Mag I obtained is out of my brothers Ram and has 300,000 miles on it! It still ran good but consumed oil. Got it for free.
I have already bought the intake from Australia, a 142 Weiand from a member here AND had that Weiand rebuilt with the lobes machined and Teflon strips installed . I want a fun responsive engine without a big camshaft. Plus I think small Roots superchargers are neat. I know BIG power is not made with tiny blowers and I'm fine with that.I know you’re doing a mild build, but for not very much more money you could get a complete stroker rotating assembly from scat, balanced and ready to basically set bearing clearance, and drop in. Put your ported magnum heads on it for now and have plenty of room for improvement later if you choose. It’ll be a torque monster. The blower and heads become a big limitation at that point though. Down the rabbit hole we go.
You know what’s neater than small roots blowers?I have already bought the intake from Australia, a 142 Weiand from a member here AND had that Weiand rebuilt with the lobes machined and Teflon strips installed . I want a fun responsive engine without a big camshaft. Plus I think small Roots superchargers are neat. I know BIG power is not made with tiny blowers and I'm fine with that.