downside for extra stroke
That car would be faster with a better engine for sure. If it's that fast with a 377 it would be faster with a 400+ inch mill.
I still haven't seen a BBSS motor make less TQ even at lower RPM, well at least where it was the bore/strokes fault. Its usually the fault of the intake runner length, cam and compression combination that's paired with it.
Bret
BTW I am doing one of those 380 inch SBF 8.200 deck engines right now and I've gone even further with excellent results too. lower decks are certainly better at times like you alluded too. I have one of those I did that went 185+ mph on TT5s and had 5.300 rods so that must scare the hell out of the rod ratio people!
I still haven't seen a BBSS motor make less TQ even at lower RPM, well at least where it was the bore/strokes fault. Its usually the fault of the intake runner length, cam and compression combination that's paired with it.
Bret
Last edited by Judd; May 12, 2006 at 12:58 AM.
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I'm hoping to make over 500 rw on motor, thru a 4500 nitrous converter and a th400, and then later on start spraying the car, start at 100 and probably work my way up to around 200 or so, I figure that will be more then enough to get the car well into the 9's so that will be more then enough for me.
Thanks in advance for the insight.
I'm hoping to make over 500 rw on motor, thru a 4500 nitrous converter and a th400, and then later on start spraying the car, start at 100 and probably work my way up to around 200 or so, I figure that will be more then enough to get the car well into the 9's so that will be more then enough for me.
Thanks in advance for the insight.
When I do these there are no shelf pistons for that stroke so I do customs and I do them with smaller rings and they are NA only or small NOS but still work great and are strong but the skirt shape is a custom one from Wiseco for the short 5.500 cylinder. You could do a piston with a 1.2, 1.2, 3.0mm for like 200 shot or less and still be strong probably and fit it all in there.
The machine work would be the same as there is only a tiny amount of clearancing depending on rods but the piston would be around 250ish more than a shelf piston. With the shorter rings the skirt could move up on the piston a little to compensate for the stroke. The #8 piston on the Wiseco's I use already clears the reluctor as is with no work.
Thanks, that is some good info. I may have to give you a call and inquire about some other things as well... so I can have a better understanding of what's involved in a buildup of this nature, what's really needde to get to the specific goals that I have in mind, etc.etc. The # you have listed in your sig, when's a good time to reach you?
The debate over under-square, square, and over-square engines will probably go on as long as internal combustion engines continue to be made. GENERALLY SPEAKING (in other words, there are exceptions to every "rule"), over-square engines are sometimes referred to as "horsepower" engines. They make horsepower, and lots of it, by being able to rev the pi$$ out of the engine; however, take a close look at the area under the torque curve of an over-square engine.
Under-square engines are sometimes referred to as "torque" engines. They do not need to be reved to produce gobs of torque, and, as stated above, unless you get ridiculous with stroke length, you do not give up a lot in the ability to rev. Now, take a look at the area under the torque curve of an under-square engine.
So, right away, we can see that there at least two different ways to make "power".
If you choose to stroke an LS1/LS6, it has to be done correctly. The OEM heads have to go (or get a damn good porting job), it'd be a good idea to go with an aftermarket intake, a more aggressive cam, larger throttle body and MAF, and it would probably be wise to go with an all-forged rotating assembly. A reasonably stroked LS1/LS6 (say, 3.905 X 4.00) will yield somewhere around 383 CI, and give up very little in rev capability, not that that matters...when you build a stroker set-up, you already know you're going to make power without having to rev the pi$$ out of the engine.
BTW, this leverage arm/crank throw business being the sole reason for strokers producing more torque than a square, or over-square engine is mostly bunk. Torque is a product of displacement and BMEP. The major reason a stroker produces more torque, is because you've increased it's displacement. There's been plenty of experimental work done to prove that longer throw cranks/stroker rods have a negligible effect upon torque production, as compared to an engine's displacement/BMEP. Hey, I didn't make up this "rule"; someone a whole lot smarter than I am figured it out. I just read it, and it made sense to me.
The debate over under-square, square, and over-square engines will probably go on as long as internal combustion engines continue to be made. GENERALLY SPEAKING (in other words, there are exceptions to every "rule"), over-square engines are sometimes referred to as "horsepower" engines. They make horsepower, and lots of it, by being able to rev the pi$$ out of the engine; however, take a close look at the area under the torque curve of an over-square engine.
Under-square engines are sometimes referred to as "torque" engines. They do not need to be reved to produce gobs of torque, and, as stated above, unless you get ridiculous with stroke length, you do not give up a lot in the ability to rev. Now, take a look at the area under the torque curve of an under-square engine.
So, right away, we can see that there at least two different ways to make "power".
If you choose to stroke an LS1/LS6, it has to be done correctly. The OEM heads have to go (or get a damn good porting job), it'd be a good idea to go with an aftermarket intake, a more aggressive cam, larger throttle body and MAF, and it would probably be wise to go with an all-forged rotating assembly. A reasonably stroked LS1/LS6 (say, 3.905 X 4.00) will yield somewhere around 383 CI, and give up very little in rev capability, not that that matters...when you build a stroker set-up, you already know you're going to make power without having to rev the pi$$ out of the engine.
BTW, this leverage arm/crank throw business being the sole reason for strokers producing more torque than a square, or over-square engine is mostly bunk. Torque is a product of displacement and BMEP. The major reason a stroker produces more torque, is because you've increased it's displacement. There's been plenty of experimental work done to prove that longer throw cranks/stroker rods have a negligible effect upon torque production, as compared to an engine's displacement/BMEP. Hey, I didn't make up this "rule"; someone a whole lot smarter than I am figured it out. I just read it, and it made sense to me.
Yep, torque is the product of displacement and BMEP, and power is torque x rpm. As you pointed out bore and stroke ratios don't have much effect on torque production with a given displacement and breathing. Doesn't that negate the oversquare = horsepower, undersquare = torque theories?
You are presenting it both ways. Which idea do you buy?
If your heads suck your stroke won't have as much impact on performance. If you have good heads then the stroke will definitley make more power and more area under the curve.
So again, to the question: Is it worth it to increase stroke, with a given bore size?
The answer is, as long as your heads will support it, YES. If you can fit the stroke in there, and aren't limited by class rules, then YES it will make more power than the same bore and less stroke.
If it were me, and I could use any stroke I wanted for a given set of heads and bore, I’d stroke it MORE and rev it LESS. (yes, that’s the exact opposite of what some have suggested) I’d make the same power as Mr. Rev-happy at peak but toast him under the curve while enjoying a more reliable engine and not having to change out my valve springs constantly. The only concern is fuel economy, but that’s what they made 6 speeds with double overdrive gears for. Unless you’re racing in a class that limits displacement, then why the hell not do it like that?
I can already hear the complaints: "oh, but you can't rev it very high like that! I want to rev it to the moooooon!" These complaints are easily disarmed. Ask the question: "Why?" Why are revs so important to you? Is your goal to make revs or is it to make power? (talk about losing sight of the forest for the trees...)
There are limits, mechanically, to how much you can stroke a motor, obviously, and when you're talking about high boost it complicates matters with cylinder pressures.
But, as a general rule: given a fixed bore, the winner of the race is the guy with the larger stroke. Whoever said that they want LESS cubes and LESS stroke for a given bore, ("I wish they'd release a short stroke LS7") just get the hell out of here right now. No, seriously, leave. Go get a Honda and rev it up however high you want if you think RPM's > displacement. Meanwhile, us sane people who live in the real world will continue to use stroke, make power, and spank your @$$ at the strip.
Oh, and in the LS1 world, it’s completely non-controversial that a 4” stroke will run all day long and isn’t any kind of a problem for the motor. Somewhere north of there is where things start getting complicated.
That's my $.02. I'm not an expert but I'd like to think everything above is simply common sense.





