Poll: I-Beam or H-Beam?
The stock pieces are not weak. We will be pushing one of the cars as far as it will go this year. I'm thinking we can break 900 rwhp with just upgraded rod bolts.
The stock pieces are not weak. We will be pushing one of the cars as far as it will go this year. I'm thinking we can break 900 rwhp with just upgraded rod bolts.
So if that's the case-if i were to build a budget 346 can i just use the stock rods-polish the beams and use some forged pistons? Would that be good for 650-700 rwhp?
Stock Crank - $75 for polishing
Stock Rods - Free
ARP Bolts though - $100
Diamond or Mahle Pistons - $600
FM or Clevite Bearings - $100
ARP Head Bolts - $125
5.3L Heads and 918 springs- $500
Your choice of cam I like the voodoo cams for street use - $400
Pacesetter Coated LT's - $450
Cut-out - $75
Lid - $100
ls6 intake for pre 2001 ls1's - $350
ported tb - Free
de-screened MAF (? the effectiveness of this) - Free
Not too bad I don't think. Just a quick guess on the prices, heads may be off a little. And that should be good for 400-475 rwhp depending on tune from what I have seen in my own and other cars. And price isn't too bad either considering. One way to lower cost is to go with ls6 springs, buy a used cam, used headers, may already have an ls6 intake but do not skip this step, and that's about all I can think of right off the bat. Auto cars will need a stall and Man cars will eventually need clutches. Then both sooner or later will need a 12 bolt or 9" rear.
My new motor is a 370 and I'm using eagle SBC I-beams ($270) with some used forged diamond pistsons I got for $200.
I just wanted to point out that stock parts are not weak. Parts don't break from power for the most part, they break from mistakes such as detonation and oiling issues.
Lunati, Manley, Eagle, Scat all make good stuff for the dollar spent. Some are a few bucks more but any of them (if assembled correctly) can reliably put up with alot of power and make a good upgrade over a factory rod even if you put in the better bolts (which certainly helps the stock piece put up with more power and RPM before failure).
I'm not voting because I dont feel one design is necessarily superior to the other....
Tony M.
In theory, an I-beam rod had bending stiffness in the direction where the pin and journal are rotating, not contributing bending forces. The H-beam has stiffness in this access. However, the strength is more complicated than just adding metal. So buying from a known vendor whose parts have been used and raced by people with combinations similar to or more abusive than yours is important. These manufacturers have developed their designs from experience, which may have included failures. For example, how many rods have you seen fail around the beam? How many around the rod bolt or pin?
Weight isn’t always a sign of designed in strength. Crower Maxi-Lights are sized for specific journal and pin sizes. Other rods frequently use one blank for different sizes. They end up with small journal/pin sizes weighing more than their large journal/pin cousins do.
The various sections of a rod can only be made so thin. H-beams have two sections along the rods longest dimension and can only take so much off the center. There are crossbeam rods that have a cross-shaped cross section. These rods claim the thicker material handles drilling an EDM pin oiling hole easer.
However, we live in the real world, and if you are spending $600 for a set, the Compstar, Eagle and SCATs are H-beam.
The Best V8 Stories One Small Block at Time
no matter what the papers, sponsors, techies on the board, you or me say, it is still a matter of opinion. I'd say you're okay with either I or H beams, as long as they are a good quality material, and they fit your plans. Spend your money accordingly. Personally, I'd say H beam, just because I can, lol.
no matter what the papers, sponsors, techies on the board, you or me say, it is still a matter of opinion. I'd say you're okay with either I or H beams, as long as they are a good quality material, and they fit your plans. Spend your money accordingly. Personally, I'd say H beam, just because I can, lol.
Thanks for the input guys.
(G-force) of about 8000 -10000 pounds. The lighter you can make the rod, the better.







