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Chevy Vs. Ford

Street Car Shootout
June, 2009
By Matthew King
Photography by Car Craft Staff
Ford Mustang Chevrolet Nova Front View
Ford Mustang Engine Bay
Normally an engine swap... 
   
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Ford Mustang Engine Bay
Normally an engine swap wouldn’t take more than a day, but Robert V. of Fast Track Performance had to build a custom crossmember for the TH400 tranny Hollywood went with, build the exhaust, and add weight for our shootout.
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Hollywood (left) and Ratty... 
   
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Hollywood (left) and Ratty (right) may be smiling for the camera, but don’t let the fake smug expressions fool you—the level of seriousness and intensity they were emitting was thick enough to cut with a knife.
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We selected the largest set... 
   
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We selected the largest set of Hooker Super Competition headers available with 3.5-inch collectors. The Mustang used 2-inch primaries, while the Nova went with a set of 17/8-inch primaries.
Ford Mustang Side View
After firing up the Mustang... 
   
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Ford Mustang Side View
After firing up the Mustang for the first time, we did a few quick dry hops in the parking lot to make sure everything was operational. If you think this is ghetto, just ask the Chevy guys what they did!
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Too bad it didn’t co... 
   
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Too bad it didn’t count!
Ford Mustang Right Rear View
The combination of sticky... 
   
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Ford Mustang Right Rear View
The combination of sticky 28x12.50-15 Mickey Thompson ET Streets, Fast Track bars, and the 9-inch Art Carr converter that stalled to 4,000 rpm on the transbrake netted us consistent short times in the 1.51 to 1.58 range. Not bad for 3.55:1 gears, eh?
Ford Mustang Left Front View
Weighing in at the end of... 
   
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Ford Mustang Left Front View
Weighing in at the end of the run proved that our extra-light coupe actually weighed in 20 pounds heavier at 3,140 than the Nova’s 3,120.
Chevrolet Nova Front View
“Chevys only run good... 
   
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Chevrolet Nova Front View
“Chevys only run good when they leak!” Ratty exclaimed. He said it, not us.
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In an attempt to reduce e.t.’s,... 
   
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In an attempt to reduce e.t.’s, Robert V. (left) and Hollywood played with jetting, timing, and fuel pressure. Nevertheless, we were stuck in the 11.40s all day.
Ford Mustang Left Front View
Confident that our single... 
   
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Ford Mustang Left Front View
Confident that our single 2015 Weldon pump could supply the demanding level of fuel required for both the motor and nitrous, we decided to go ahead and make a final glory pass on the unit. We poured in C-16, installed the small 100hp pills, and opened the bottle for a wheel-jerking 10.71 at 126 mph with a 1.51 short time leaving off idle!
Chevrolet Nova Engine Bay
What began as a sunny Sunday... 
   
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Chevrolet Nova Engine Bay
What began as a sunny Sunday turned gray and rainy as soon as we dropped the motor into the ’72 Nova in Ratty’s driveway. At least the big 17/8-inch-primary Hooker Super Comp headers fit.
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Crunch time! Brian (Reb’s... 
   
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Crunch time! Brian (Reb’s Specialties) tore apart the Turbo 400 and found a scant few salvageable internal parts. The pump gears had eaten into the pump housing, clutch packs were destroyed, and the transbrake worked occasionally. He’s laughing ’cause it’s barely 10 p.m. Little did we know we still had five hours of work ahead of us!
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Before Wednesday’s test-and-tune... 
   
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Before Wednesday’s test-and-tune was over, we’d played around with carb jetting, timing changes, and even valve lash settings in hopes of squeezing more e.t. out of the beast. Our best time that night was our first run off the trailer—an 11.31—and we slowed from there.
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It’s 3:17 a.m. While... 
   
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It’s 3:17 a.m. While you were sleeping, we were just finishing up. While we’re under here, have a look at this seasoned street racer. Simple, stock, and dirty are terms that best describe the chassis. What’s obvious are the generic slapper bars, 8.5-inch 10-bolt rear, and Lakewood drag shocks. What’s not so obvious are the “tire-clearanced” multileaf springs and the lack of subframe connectors. What can we say; it just works.
Chevrolet Nova Right Front View
It’s Friday, the big... 
   
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Chevrolet Nova Right Front View
It’s Friday, the big day, and we were on top of our game. After deciding the car left stronger using the ’brake, Ratty clicked off a few consistent passes in the 11.3 range. Even using the transbrake, the Nova launches without any drama.
Chevrolet Nova Right Front View
If we’d had a burnout... 
   
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Chevrolet Nova Right Front View
If we’d had a burnout contest, Ratty would have taken that trophy, too. Helped by a little VHT, blazing the ET Streets well into Third gear seemed to make the car hook its best. Still, our best 1.609-second 60-foot was crawlin’ compared to the trick-suspended Mustang’s 1.55-second benchmark.
Chevrolet Nova Tire View
Here’s what a new ET... 
   
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Chevrolet Nova Tire View
Here’s what a new ET Street looks like after five John Force burnouts.
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Friday’s celebrity guest... 
   
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Friday’s celebrity guest was Art Carr himself—how cool is that? Art supplied our two street fighters with his efficient 9-inch converters, built specifically to suit the cars’ specs. No matter what you hear, you’re unlikely to find the “right” converter for your car on the shelf of your local speed shop.
Chevrolet Nova Front View
The Nova’s converter... 
   
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Chevrolet Nova Front View
The Nova’s converter stalled to 3,500 rpm on the foot brake, and it crept to 4,000 rpm against the transbrake, which put us right at the leading edge of the torquey 406’s powerband.

The jaw-jacking and trash-talking started before the first wrench was turned or the first pass was made down the track, which is exactly what we expected when we pitted staffer against staffer, friend against friend, and Chevy against Ford in a street car shootout of epic proportions. Well, epic to us.

Even casual readers know Car Craft spends a lot of time building and dyno-testing engines of every make, model, and size. Most of them appear in the pages once or twice, and then go off to another life. Sometimes we use them in project vehicles or as dyno mules, or they are returned to the shop that built them. Quite a few end up gathering dust until we need them again. But like the old saying goes, we don’t race dynos, and the ultimate purpose of any high-performance engine is to make a car go fast. How fast? We dropped two of our most recent small-block project engines into a pair of readers’ street cars to find out.

The engines, cars, and drivers we pitted against each other stacked up well. The Chevy 406, a 0.030-over stock-stroke Chevy 400, and the Ford 408, a stroked 351 Windsor, each ran high-rise Edelbrock Victor Jr. intakes, Crane Cams hydraulic-roller camshafts with near-identical lobe specifications, Holley 750-cfm HP series carburetors, aluminum cylinder heads, and Hooker headers, and they both ran on 91 octane. The similarities were further borne out in the engine buildups and dyno-tests we featured in the March ’02 issue’s 400-Inch Small-Block cover section, with each engine cranking out almost exactly 500 hp and 500 lb-ft of torque, give or take a few numbers.

The cars and their respective drivers are also cast from the same mold, even though one’s a Ford guy and the other wears a Bow Tie. Damon “Hollywood” Rivetti with his ’86 Mustang and Mike “Ratty” Consolo with his ’72 Nova were our hot-shoe drivers and head mechanics. Both cut their drag racing teeth street racing in SoCal’s San Fernando Valley, and they’ve been friendly rivals for years, both on and off the race track. Also friendly rivals are Car Craft’s own Henry De Los Santos and Tony Nausieda, who built the Ford and Chevy engines, respectively, a few months ago. You’d have thought we were running a head-to-head shootout back in March from the transcripts of the cell phone calls flying back and forth as they built and tested their engines.

To make things fair, the rules were simple: The Orange Team’s Nova and the Blue Team’s Mustang ran the same spec tire, a 28x12.50-15 Mickey Thompson ET Street, both cars weighed a minimum 3,100 pounds, and both were allowed the use of a transbrake. Converter selection, gearing, and exhaust configuration were up to the discretion of each team. Both cars ran mufflers, but we didn’t mandate a decibel limit or check it, and they each had stock-type suspensions—no tubs, back-halves, or ladder bars allowed. After a couple of test-and-tune sessions with each car, we ran the main event at Los Angeles County Raceway (LACR), elevation 2,700 feet.

That’s it—as close to a heads-up street-race as we could make it.

Art Carr Transmission Co.
877/ART-CARR

artcarr.com
Holley Performance Products/Hooker Headers
Bowling Green
KY

www.holley.com
Crane Cams
386/258-6174 (tech)

www.cranecams.com
Mickey Thompson
4670 Allen Rd.
Stow
OH  44224
800/222-9092

mickeythompsontires.com
Edelbrock
310/781-2222

www.edelbrock.com
Rebs Specialties
www.rebsspecialties.com
Fast Track Performance
www.fasttrackperf.com
Weldon
FastParts
www.fastpartsracing.com

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