If we're talking 360, then here's my experience;
When I installed KB107s, they came in pretty much all of them, at .012 below deck, which at 4.045 bore is 210.5 cc per inch, and 012 below deck is thus 2.52 cc.; calculated/not measured.
My block is a 1971.
The first time I assembled this engine, I did so by cutting the block to zero deck, and I used the 028 gasket for a Squish distance of .028
At the first scheduled freshening, the following winter, I noticed that the 028 gasket was migrating towards the valley in several places. Bad news,
So I tore the engine right down, and decked it again so I could use the FelPro 039.
The new deck height was .007 pop-up, for a Squish of .032.
In subsequent freshening , the Felpro did fine and I even reused it more than once.
My heads are Edelbrock closed chambers; measured at 63cc
My KB107s are ~5cc eyebrows, per pair, not measured, stated in the catalog.
Thus my Scr with the 039 gasket, comes to;
753.5+(63+5+8.8 less 1.5 deck) divided by (75.3) = 11.01 nominal
With the 028 gasket at zero-deck the total chamber volume was
753.5+(63+5+6.8 plus 2.5 deck) divided by (77.3) = 10.75 nominal
Jus saying ........
BTW,
I own and have torn down five early 340s, and every one of them had pistons poking up above the decks. However, with those big X-head chambers, The Scr was never anywhere near the advertised 10.5, the numbers I recall were closer to 9.7.
BTW-2,
From my experience, for a streeter, cylinder pressure makes heat, makes torque, especially in the low to midrange. On the street, I would gladly sacrifice high-rpm power for ftlbs at 30/35 mph, in 1.92 Second gear.
and I ain't accepting it with rear gears, if it means that I have to scream down the hiway to get it;
and I ain't running more than 3.55s.
and, I'm not dropping it into first.
And I'm not building a bigger engine!
That just leaves pressure.
I liked 195psi;
185 is what I have today, with the bigger cam, and it's just not the same.
When I up-cammed and lost a bunch of pressure, I was almost devastated. I spent all summer looking to find the lost torque. A new lower first gear finally satisfied me.