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10-23-2016, 09:59 PM | #26 | |
Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Boise, Idaho
Posts: 594
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Re: Upgraded heads recommendation for my 87?
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My butt dyno says 250/380 give or take. It tows every bit as nice as my 454 (290/410) but if i posted those numbers people would call BS. I think nick has the right idea with the 342 gears. It is cheap, easy and easily reversible if you do not like it. it would be my first mod. If you are going to swap heads, you may as well swap cams. From there it is easy to keep gong because in your head you say, "well i am down this far I may as well xyz". It starts to add up. |
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10-23-2016, 10:36 PM | #27 | ||||||
Post Whore
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: Sacramento, CA
Posts: 10,870
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Re: Upgraded heads recommendation for my 87?
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H8002K - Heads - 195cc SB Chevy Head Quote:
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visit the Chevrolet Performance website and select Small Block engines, you can sort them by horse power, torque or size and start clicking on them one by one then look at their output and read their specs, they list every part that goes into building that engine, even if you don't buy GM, you can see what the cylinder head specs were, or the cam specs, etc. here's a chart for an engine called the 350 HO TURN-KEY with Vortec iron; 64-cc chambers Cylinder Heads (P/N 12558060): Camshaft Type (P/N 24502476):Hydraulic flat tappet Camshaft Lift (in.):.435 intake / .460 exhaust Camshaft Duration (@.050 in.):212° intake / 222° exhaust Quote:
this is street car recommendation not weekend warrior at the drag strip Quote:
also some heads (like the Vortec ones) have a different intake manifold angle and therefor require a special Vortec style intake manifold and as always where do you stop, ok so you bought heads and a cam, might as well get new lifters, or do you? might as well get new push rods, or do you?, might as well get new rockers, or do you? hewk got a new cam so might as well replace the timing set (chain and sprockets) or do you? well since we took the water pump off to get the cam out no sense in bolting the old still working water pump back on might as well get a new one, or do you? etc. etc. etc. put a plan down on paper with a budget, six months later when you are done, see how you've done Last edited by Gregski; 10-23-2016 at 10:54 PM. |
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10-24-2016, 10:59 PM | #28 |
Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: PNW
Posts: 3,627
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Re: Upgraded heads recommendation for my 87?
Skunk, based on how you evaluated your truck's current performance, I'll summarize, "mostly happy with it", I think you can have some fun tweaking your small block since you don't need a lot more power. I have a 93 TBI motor (non-Vortec) that is pretty fun to drive and makes all the right noises. I ran a Flowmaster cat-back exhaust and felt the difference. I went to an open element air cleaner and that was a good change. I went to a high flow catalytic converter, and that helped. Next are mods to the TBI. I did the "salad bowl" under the air cleaner and that helped air flow. Google ultimate TBI mods. From there, the projects on the tbichips.com website actually give you a ton of good info, commentary, and recipes (for power, not grandma's sawdust and horse-hide biscuits).
You can progressively do the mods I have listed. None of them require a change in the ECU chip. Once you change the cam, you may need to get a custom chip. My understanding is that the Vortec heads are worth about 40-50 hp out of the box, if the intake and exhaust will flow enough to utilize them. You could do those heads down the road with the GMPP TBI manifold. Then add headers if you want. Regardless, if you have an accordion Y-pipe in the exhaust, you can replace it with a mandrel bent one or go to dual exhaust (spendy if you have to run cats). They stock Y-pipes are known to be a major restriction in the 88-98 trucks. If your system has a cat I would keep running a cat. It makes captain planet happy and keeps your computer seeing more of what it expects. Bear in mind that low end torque is what you want if you are pushing tall gears, so use moderate exhaust diameter and moderate cam specs. If you do any driving in town, the shorter gears may save you gas there to balance the higher RPMs on the highway. The 3.42s may be a great compromise. I don't think we know how big/heavy your truck is (or isn't). I went with 3.73s instead of the standard 3.50s when I ordered my truck since it is an extended cab 4x4 and relatively heavy. My RPMs are about 1800 at 70 mph with a 4L60E. Let us know what you decide to do and how it works out. Even if it's one thing at a time, I'll enjoy following along. Thanks, LT7A |
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