ok i have an 81 toyota 4x4 with a 69 307 shoehorned in. there is power for days stock...I WANT MORE...any help?
Printable View
ok i have an 81 toyota 4x4 with a 69 307 shoehorned in. there is power for days stock...I WANT MORE...any help?
you have your Truck all set up for a 350, just take the 307 out and put a 350 in. the 350 has a lot more power stock than a 307 and it would take a lot of machining to get the 307 up in power, you could boost it a little with a set of headders and a cam and new intake but, a stock 350 would cost less than all that and you would end up with more power, just get the oldest 350 you can, the comp raito's were higher, pre '71 especially.
Matt, there are two problems with pre-71 motors. First, the compression ratio is too high to run on today's cat-piss unleaded gas and secondly, the seats in the heads are too soft to run unleaded without spending the loot to install hard seats.Quote:
Originally posted by Matt167
you have your Truck all set up for a 350, just take the 307 out and put a 350 in. the 350 has a lot more power stock than a 307 and it would take a lot of machining to get the 307 up in power, you could boost it a little with a set of headders and a cam and new intake but, a stock 350 would cost less than all that and you would end up with more power, just get the oldest 350 you can, the comp raito's were higher, pre '71 especially.
Bob Parmenter had an excellent explantion of the soft seat syndrome, saying that the lead in the fuel acted as a contaminant to the welding process that goes on between the valve seat and the valve head, preventing seat recession.
I see, thanks for correcting me on the pre '71 350 thing.Quote:
Originally posted by techinspector1
Matt, there are two problems with pre-71 motors. First, the compression ratio is too high to run on today's cat-piss unleaded gas and secondly, the seats in the heads are too soft to run unleaded without spending the loot to install hard seats.
Bob Parmenter had an excellent explantion of the soft seat syndrome, saying that the lead in the fuel acted as a contaminant to the welding process that goes on between the valve seat and the valve head, preventing seat recession.
thx for advice on the 350...i think that would be the way to go...
does anyone know what chev 4x4 has the narrowest foot print, front leaf suspension and can handle a 350....i'm already torque'n the piss out of these toyota pumkins. i could use fender flairs to keep it street legal but i take alot of quad trails and they can get to be a pretty tight fit
Ford Bronco 9"