4 bolt or 6 bolt head
Only the the bolt directly surrounding the the cylinder are the head bolts. The row of bolts outside the the lifters close to the valley are not considered head bolts.
A true LSX engine will have two more bolts per cylinder, one at 6 o'clock and one at 12 o'clock for 6 bolts per cylinder.
The SBC used extra bolts due to a different engine design. (bore distortion)
MY history is more on the Ford side, Four Bolt, designed for great crankcase strength. (Y-Block)
The TFD/Pro-Mod/Hemi engine design IS Four Bolt.
Use your TFS 235 heads.
Lance
Worst case is you make enough boost to lift the heads,
Worst case is also usually north of 1400 before the 4 bolt head becomes an issue on an aftermarket head I'd say that's where I'd stop and think about a 6 bolt block/head. A lot of cash to make 1400HP though...
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Here's a pic of a 6 bolt block attached- arrows point to the 6 mount areas.
These Chevrolet Performance LSX Bowtie engine blocks have been designed for the advanced competition engine builder. They feature Siamese cylinder bores and a semi-finished deck height. The Chevrolet Performance LSX Bowtie engine blocks can accept a maximum stroke of 4.250 in., a maximum bore of 4.250 in., and they can support displacements of 454 cu. in. or more. The blocks feature cast iron construction with a powdercoated orange finish. They accept all Gen III and IV LS-style cylinder heads, crankshafts, camshafts, and other components.
Additional features of the Chevrolet Performance Parts LSX Bowtie engine blocks include:
* Front oil feed lines that can be plugged or restricted for mechanical flat tappet or mechanical lifter applications
* Can be safely machined to 9.200 in. deck height
* 1054 Billet Steel 6-bolt main bearing caps
* 6-bolt cylinder head bolt pattern
* Cam bores that can be machined to accept 60mm roller bearings
* Can be machined for larger diameter lifters
* External oil pump feed at the rear
* Added 7th transmission bolt hole to work with early-style GM transmissions
* Can accept a front motor plate for racing use
* Threaded freeze plugs that can be used for external heaters or coolers
* Windowed main bulkhead
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Like me.....
Many people do that........for the future when they build a new motor, most likely with boost, they already have the 6 bolt heads.
Like me.....
I don't think you'll actually find people purposely buying 6 bolt heads for 4 bolt blocks.
By the way I vote this the stupidest argument I've seen in a long time.
That's possible but if you don't do things out of fear of something happening you're never gonna do ****. There's always something that can happen. Build hoping for the best.
And to throw something back at ya, what if it never pops and you bought 4 bolt heads. Now you have to buy heads again and waste money when you could have built it once.
I know a guy that bought heads 10 years ago that were too big, he's a long term dude. He just put them to use a couple of weeks ago.

FUTURE......when people know they will need 6 bolt heads in the future.....they are smart to buy them and put them on their current 4 bolt block until they upgrade that block to go BIG on their next build.
Its been done to death......most people I know have 6 bolt heads on their 4 bolt blocks waiting to upgrade or already have.









