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Say someone has two sets of heads. Both are factory 4V heads. One set is a 1970 closed chamber with the factory explosive valves that need to be replaced. The other set is a rebuilt set of open chamber cobra jet spec heads that uses new aftermarket valves, but nothing real special only they don't explode.
Now here is the question. Can you take the new valves off the CJ spec heads and put them in the closed chamber heads and just put it on the engine with no other modifications?? Will you have to grind push rods or something? Other than a valve seat lap job, would you have to do anything else to get it to run??????
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Thanks Dave. I will do that. I can always buy valves if they don't fit.

Larry, you are right but I already asked George about that and he said that the engine I got now is running about 8 to 1 ratio because it has dished pistons and open chamber heads with lots of room. By putting on the quench heads, they won't quench because I would have to shave off some of the block if I wanted it do that, but it would raise the compresion ratio to about 9 to 1. That would mean I could no longer run regular gas and would have to start using premium, but I drive the car so little the cost factor is not a real show stopper. George say it will only add maybe a few horsepower and probably wouldn't notice the difference, but it is going back to the original heads that came on the car so at least there is that. I am not going for gobs more horsepower, just a little bit extra is all.
When I purchased #7024 I had no idea what, if anything had been done to the engine, but the car always felt strong. It had a stock style cast iron manifold and holley carb, but the decklid was notched, presumably for Webers. I swapped out the intake for an Edelbrock and dynoed it at the first opportunity I got, it put out ~400HP at the flywheel.

After spinning a rod bearing at the track I pulled the motor for rebuild and found it has the dished pistons and closed chamber heads (std ports) and possibly a hotter cam (I haven't got that far to tell), but it goes to show that it doesn't take much other than some simple swaps to add quite a few HP.

In the rebuild I'm changing to flat top pistons, C302B heads and solid roller cam for a few more HP still Wink.
DeTom,

My advice, for any application using a flat tappet hydraulic camshaft, the best budget heads are the iron Australian small port, closed chamber 302C heads. You can buy them ready to install from Power Heads for $1000/pair ($1500 with porting). Combine them with the Edelbrock Performer 2V or the Edelbrock RPM Air Gap intake manifolds, a 750 Holley, the Comp Cams 274XE camshaft and the GTS exhaust system. That's an approximately 400 bhp motor that idles smooth, powerband of 2000 to 6000 rpm, good throttle response, rev to the mid 6000 rpm range. Nothing temperamental, unreliable, exotic about this motor at all. Reliable, drivable, sound in every way. Paint the Edelbrock Performer manifold blue and the motor still looks stock. But the throttle response will put a smile on your face, much stronger than the big port heads.

With flat top pistons the compression ratio will be about 10.6:1 with those heads. That's assuming the block has not been zero decked. With dished pistons the compression ratio will be about 9.7:1.

cowboy from hell
Last edited by George P
Thanks again George. But the reason I asked was I already have both sets of heads and wouldn't have to buy nothing. Heck if I had the money I would buy the biggest badasseset engine that Mr. McGowen could build for me. But I have lots of things to spend money on my car for now that are of a higher priority. I just asked cause that would be something I could do and would only cost a gasket set.
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