And they should be. In my opinion, the 225 is what they stuck with because it offered more low-end grunt and power. They are basically the same as a 225 but the rods and crankshaft. Some have used the 198 longer rod (with a 2.2/2.5 4 cylinder piston) to make a long rod 225.They must be kind of rare by now.
Yeah, I had a 71 Duster 198 3 on the tree. Many have been mistaken for 225's.
Never did understand why they went from the low deck 170 and made a 198.
Lot of manufacturing cost for 27 cubes. Maybe that is why the 198 got dropped after a few years.
Just speculation on my part.
Correct, the ONLY difference between 198 and 225 is rods and crank. Everything else is the same. A huge money saver for mother mopar.1 block (RG only) vs 2 blocks
198/225 pistons are common, also, aren't they? the longer rod offsets the shorter stroke so the pistons aren't 1/2" in the hole
They were already casting low-deck 170's, which use about 10# less cast iron/block, and forging the crank & rods. The rods are also shorter, which means less steel to forge, and even greater savings on the short 3.125" stroke crank. Manifolds & pistons were the same for all (3) displacements,.....so You think it saved Mopar money to tool-up to mfr. (2) new parts that add weight & material costs..????? No......, cars were getting heavier, tires were getting larger, and more torque was needed for the smaller 'economy' version. It wasn't a good idea & didn't last long, but hey, it gave Us 7" rods we didn't have before to do light piston/high squeeze builds.Correct, the ONLY difference between 198 and 225 is rods and crank. Everything else is the same. A huge money saver for mother mopar.
Naw. It's a standard stroke 198. lolthink mine is a 198
dose that say gw198r or 6w198r ?
then 351 1008 ?
so its a short stoke 225 ?
View attachment 1716394489
View attachment 1716394490
So its newer then my truck
Since it didn't have a pcv
Oil bath air filter
So Chrysler shut down an entire engine assy. line when they dumped the low deck Slant block?Chrysler replaced the 170 with the 198 primarily for the significant cost savings in making and building/handling/processing one rather than two blocks. Moreover, the 170's output was no longer giving performance considered adequate or competitive as the cars were growing heavier and emissions regulations were beginning to tighten; the 198 gave enough of a goose to the performance of the base-equipment engine to satisfy Chrysler that the cars would be competitive.
There's lots of proof that these are the reasons, but there will always be those insistent on substituting their guesses and assumptions and fairytales for the actual, factual, well-documented reasons why [company] did [thing].
»shrug«
So Chrysler shut down an entire engine assy. line when they dumped the low deck Slant block?