383 or no??
Good heads and cam and valvetrain for say $2500 can take a 300rwhp bolton car and put it over 400rwhp some even go over 420rwhp if they make good choices and assemble everything well. The $3000 more it will cost to go to a stroker rotating assembly assembled, balanced and all might gain you another 20-30hp by allowing for a larger cam or larger heads withing the same rpm range.
Everyone has a hardon for displacement but it cost a LOT for that little bit of extra power compared to what you get with a good topend, and with the stroker you still need to good topend.
If you have the coin to do a good topend and the stroker, fine, but if the quest for displacement causes you to cut corners on the topend they you are making the wrong choice.
Frankly the way you are talking you sound pretty ignorant and someone else's 355 is more likely to be a step backward from stock than forward. The stock parts are not cheap and easy to improve on, heavier pistons that are lower than stock compression are very common as is halfassed machining and just general low quality rebuilds.
Good heads and cam and valvetrain for say $2500 can take a 300rwhp bolton car and put it over 400rwhp some even go over 420rwhp if they make good choices and assemble everything well. The $3000 more it will cost to go to a stroker rotating assembly assembled, balanced and all might gain you another 20-30hp by allowing for a larger cam or larger heads withing the same rpm range.
Everyone has a hardon for displacement but it cost a LOT for that little bit of extra power compared to what you get with a good topend, and with the stroker you still need to good topend.
If you have the coin to do a good topend and the stroker, fine, but if the quest for displacement causes you to cut corners on the topend they you are making the wrong choice.
Frankly the way you are talking you sound pretty ignorant and someone else's 355 is more likely to be a step backward from stock than forward. The stock parts are not cheap and easy to improve on, heavier pistons that are lower than stock compression are very common as is halfassed machining and just general low quality rebuilds.






