Car Craft Magazine Homepage Car Craft
 

540 Horses For 4,800 Bucks

A Near Perfect Balance Of Price And Performance
By Matthew King
Photography by Matthew King, Henry De Los Santos
P160273 Image Large
P160274 Image Large

OK, let’s get this out of the way right now—$4,800 isn’t cheap for a small-block Chevy, and 540 hp isn’t unheard of. But making 540 hp for 4,800 bucks on pump gas is a big deal! To be fair, that price doesn’t include headers, a distributor, a water pump, or plug wires, but it does include an expensive carburetor, machine work costs, and most of the little items that add up to a lot of money at the end of the day. It’s basically a bit more than you get when you buy any crate motor.

The foundation of this project is a 383 stroker short-block—that’s a regular 0.030-over 350 block with a 3.75-inch–stroke crankshaft. Actually, it was a short-block we’ve had around here for a few years, and it’s gone through several incarnations, starting as a 335hp tow-rig motor and evolving into a “mild” 435hp street/strip mill that propelled two of our project cars for several years and several thousand miles. Eventually the skirts collapsed on the cheap cast pistons (might have had something to do with all the dyno-flogging, dragstrip testing, and nitrous!) and it started burning oil faster than gas. So it was time for the stroker to enter yet another phase of its life after some freshening up.

Don’t be fooled by magazine writers who try to tell you that torque is more important than horsepower just because they built an under-cammed engine with weak cylinder heads. A good engine combination produces lots of horsepower and torque, and a good way to compare any two engines is to calculate how much of each they make per cubic inch of displacement. Kicking out 542 hp and 517 lb-ft of torque, this 383’s production works out to 1.41 hp/ci and 1.35 lb-ft/ci. And with the benefit of hindsight, we think we could have made even more power by swapping on a set of 1.6:1 roller rockers and a bigger 850- or 950-cfm carb, although the carb could introduce driveability issues and potentially run slower at the track if it softened up the bottom end. All things considered, we think this buildup represents a near perfect balance of price and performance.

Check out the details in the sidebars below.


Discuss in Our Forums
Get Adobe Flash player
Get a FREE no-hassle price quote on any new car.

Related Articles

 
Enter the Car Craft Street Machine of the Year Competition
Here's your chance to put your ride to the test against some of the best cars in the nation. Don't... more
 
10 Dyno-Proven Horsepower Combos
The dynamometer has been called a polygraph machine, a tool for uncovering the truth, a gauge that... more
 
2004 Street Machine Nationals - Second Time's A Charm - Event
The Street Machine Nationals Returns To Lima, Ohio... more
 
Musclecar Electrical System Ideas - Get Wired!
Simple Electrical Ideas For Musclecars... more

 

Get Adobe Flash player