Gentlemen,
I'm thinking about building a 408 stroker Cleveland from the ashes of my 377. The question is, how many miles can these things live? I drive a lot and would like to get 50,000 miles out of it if possible?
Thanks,
Art
Original Post
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quote:Originally posted by Cowboy from Hell:
Art,
If the thing is assembled very cautiously, if the motor is not in too wild a state of tune, if the best parts go into its assembly, if the reciprocating assembly is dynamically balanced, if the ignition & fuel system are calibrated properly on a dyno, a motor can last a very long time.
The question you may not have thought of, how over-stressed are the parts you plan to re-use? How close are they to failing already?
cowboy from hell
quote:Originally posted by RichardT:
Art, how are you going to drive that motor? A motor will last a lot longer at 3000 rpm than at 7000 rpm.
Richard T.
quote:Originally posted by DeTom:
Art, this may not help, but if you want big inches AND reliability, Ford Raceing makes a crate engine of 602 cubic inches and it has a one year warrenty. It is a little bit on the large and heavy side however.
quote:
quote:Originally posted by Daniel_Jones:
> There was never a factory Ford 454. You're thinking of the other guys.
Read what I said "Combine the stroke of the 428 with the bore of the 427
and you could get 447 to 454 cubes. Dad's 454 cube version ran fine for
90,000 miles." Ford built FE's from 332 to 428 cubic inches but it
is common to combine the 428 crank with the 427 bock and get 454 cubic
inches (447 is standard bore, 454 is 0.030"). Dad ran his in a '69
Fairlane Cobra.
> There was never a 351 in a 8.0 block.
Who said there was?
> There was never a 377,408,415 or 427 in a 9.2 Cleveland or 9.5
> Windsor block.
Ford did build 2 different strokes in 9.2" deck: 3" and 3.5".
From that perspective, the 351 is a stroker to begin with.
In any event, strokes from 3" to 4" inches are just points on
a continuum.
Dan Jones
quote:Originally posted by DeTom:
DOH!! Wait a minute Art, I just remembered. Gary in INdiana built up a 434 cubic inch stroker motor by starting with the 400M block. If I remember right he got some big numbers on a mild build. It would probably last 100K miles because it is all under-stressed. It uses regular Cleveland everything!! Ask him about it. He seemed to be real happy with it.
DeTom
quote:Originally posted by Daniel_Jones:
> I'll have to look into that. It just seems that I remember hearing that the
> 400M wasn't much of a performance engine, and that there were not a lot of
> peformance parts for it, or something like that? If it has the 9.5 deck
> height, that would probably be a problem for me?
It has a 10.297" deck height, about the same as a 460 but has the bore
spacing of a Cleveland. It's essentially a tall deck Cleveland. Comes
with long rods and a 4" stroke and can accept 4.25" strokes.
> Though I am considering running this engine with no air cleaner if I have
> to, in order to keep an air cleaner from blocking my view out the rear
> view mirror.
You're going to run no air cleaner and you're worried about a little
faster cylinder wear from stroking?
Dan Jones
quote:I thought he was looking for RPM?
quote:An extreme example of the destructiveness of a poorly tuned motor is that DeTom's motor spit the crank out the bottom because his son had crossed a pair of plug wires.
quote:Originally posted by Danno:
Art, what exactly happened to your 377 and how many miles did you have on it?
Danno
quote:Originally posted by Danno:
...You might also find a little more piston slap in the bottom of the stroke...