500 lb-ft Small Block in Six Easy Steps
Transcription
500 lb-ft Small Block in Six Easy Steps
Home • Why Use Royal Purple • Videos • Consumer Products • Racing • Where to Buy • RP Apparel GO 500 LB-FT Small Block in Six Easy Steps —courtesy, Hot Rod magazine This time it’s a quest for torque. Luckily, we got horsepower as a bonus. By the time we were done hangin’ a few speed parts off of a brand-new GM Performance Parts HT383 crate engine, it made 500 lb-ft at 4,200 rpm and 460 hp at 5,400 rpm. That’s gruntin’ for a daily driveable 383. The HT383 has been available for a couple years now, but we’ve yet to see even one in a car, and we kinda wonder why. It’s probably because GMPP markets it as a “high-torque truck engine” with 325 hp at 4,500 rpm and 415 lb-ft of torque at 3,500. Most speed freaks will shun the truck connotation and guffaw at those power numbers, opting instead for GM’s aluminum-headed Fast Burn 350 that makes 385 / 385 for just an extra Franklin over the HT383’s typical mail-order price. However, we’ll show you that an out-of-the-box HT383 is no slouch, and just a few well-chosen add-ons can make it scream. Best of all, you can add the stuff as your budget allows. But first, buy the engine. It’s PN 12497317, available for $3,895 from Scoggin-Dickey. The HT383 comes as a complete long-block with all the tin plus a water pump and an aluminum dual-plane intake. It’s based on a brand-new production block with four-bolt mains and a one-piece rear-main seal plus a set of the highly touted Vortec iron heads with 62cc chambers that mate with hypereutectic pistons (18cc dish, 0.026 in the hole) for 9.1:1 compression. The cam is a very tiny hydraulic roller with 196 / 207 duration at 0.050 with 0.431 / 0.451 lift. The rods are powdered metal, but the crank is forged. Most curiously, the HT383 uses a slightly different combo than the pedestrian 383 kits. Whereas a typical stroker uses a 400-Chevy-type crank with 3.750 stroke in a 350-type block with 4.030 bore, the new GM crate engine has a standard bore of 4.000 inches with a longer 3.800 stroke. The rods are 5.7 inches, which is stock for a 350. We initially considered comparing the 3.8-inch-stroke HT383 to an otherwise identical 3.750-stroke 383, but decided the 0.050 additional stroke length just wouldn't make that big of a difference in torque. We may be wrong, as our tuned-up crate engine made more average torque than our dyno guys had ever seen from a low-compression 383. Read on to learn how. Step One: Get It Running Your new HT383 will come out of the box complete with valve covers, a timing cover, an oil pan, an iron water pump, an 8-inch harmonic balancer, an auto-trans flexplate, and a dipstick. You’ll need to provide a carb, ignition, and headers, which we did with components from Demon, Pertronix, and Hedman. We also opted to upgrade the stock oil pan with a Milodon claimer pan that has an integral windage tray, because we’ve found them to add a few horsepower. We were surprised to discover that the HT383 comes with both a partial windage tray and a full pan baffle, so in back-to-back tests, the Milodon unit didn’t help us out this time. With the timing set to 34 degrees (36 degrees produced the same power), the jets at 70 / 76, and an electric water pump in place, the HT383 overdelivered on the dyno, spitting out 338 hp at 4,400 rpm and 444 lb-ft at 3,400 rpm. That’s more than GM claims, with peaks 100 rpm lower than advertised. Perfect. Stab it in a big ol’ heavy 3,600-pounder-even with a mild TH350 and tame 3.00 rear gears-and we’d expect you to run in the mid 13s. GM recommends a 750 carb for the HT383, but we’ve had such great luck with the little 625-cfm Road Demon that we used it for the initial run-in and first few stages of testing the engine. Right: We wanted to keep this engine simple, so our dyno ignition included nothing more than a Pertronix Flame-Thrower HEI. These all-new distributors include a coil and module specifically engineered to complement each other, plus a cap with brass terminals. We’ve found them among the best of the budget-priced HEIs. The wires are Pertronix Flame-Thrower 8mm dual-cores. Description Part Number Price GMPP HT383 crate engine 12497317 $3,895.00 at Scoggin-Dickey Hedman Tork-Step Hedders 68274 $199.95 (uncoated) at Summit Pertronix Flame-Thrower HEI D1000 $219.95 Speed Demon carb 4282010V $299.50 at Summit Milodon claimer pan 31503 $99.95 at Summit Milodon oil-pump drive 23050 $13.95 at Summit Milodon oil pump 18750 $40.39 at Summit Milodon pan baffle 32500 $5.25 at Summit Power Peak HP 338.1 @ 4,400 Peak Torque 444.3 @ 3.400 Average HP 2,500-4,800 292.6S Average Torque 2,500-4,800 424.0 Torque At 2,500 431 lb-ft Above: We wanted torque, so we chose Hedman’s Tork-Step headers in an early Camaro design. The Tork-Step offerings propose to boost bottom end by using small, 1 ½-inch tubing for the first several inches of each pipe, then stepping up to 1 5/8 tubing. Once our 383 made horsepower in the mid-400s, we tried a swap to regular 1 5/8 headers and ended up gaining a few horsepower while losing a few lb-ft of torque. As a result, the Tork-Steps remained on the engine for every dyno test in this story. Above: While Milodon pans with windage trays have made proven power in our other tests, the HT383’s factory tray seemed to match its performance. We also used a Milodan high-pressure / high-volume pump-which boosted pressure by 20 psi at every rpm point as compared to the stock HT383 pump-and a Milodan hardened oil-pump driveshaft and rear-pan baffle. page 1 2 3 —courtesy, Hot Rod magazine top of page Why Use RP Why Use RP Articles Endorsing RP Independent Testing Videos Unique Performance Advantages Which Oil is Right For You? FAQs Motor Oil FAQs Oil Filter FAQs Marine FAQs Motorcycle FAQs Racing FAQs 2-Cycle Engine FAQs Rotary Engine FAQs Transmission FAQs Purple-Ice FAQs Customer Comments “I am known by my friends to have a good ear when it comes to diagnosing engine problems. I just got done changing the oil in my ’84 Bronco 351w and was getting ready to compare some numbers before and after loading in the Royal Purple. So I fired it up, and listened to it run for 30 seconds and shut it down. Oh my gawd! I am not even going to bother to compare the numbers. I could hear the change in rpm —this stuff is incredible! I cannot believe how a smooth running engine can sound and run better, but mine does after Royal Purple. Well, gotta go change the color of all my fluids to purple!” —Dave Madsen, customer Company History • About RP • FAQs • Sitemap • Industrial Division • Employment Opportunities • Contact Us • Privacy Policy Copyright ©2011. Royal Purple, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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