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#1
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I have done some research and heard you can put higher compression flat-top
pistons in the 4.3 and gain a few HP. Who makes these pistons? I have done a bunch of searches and come up empty handed. A related question, I have also read that the 4.3 is a 350 minus two cylinders and that the pistons and rods are the same. Is this true or false? -- John WWW.Firewalk-NC.com "Be the change you wish to see in others" ----Gandhi |
#2
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Unless you are rebuilding the engine anyway, I would not waist my money. It
takes a lot of hp to gain any real benefit on the water. Most quote 15 hp to 1 mph. Spend your money on a 350 assuming your boat is 18' or bigger. A 17' will probably run sideways from the torque. Biggest bang for the buck is usually found by going to a good performance SS prop. You can see 5 mph gain with the right prop over a cheap aluminum one. -- Tony my boats and cars at http://t.thomas.home.mchsi.com - "Gorf" wrote in message ... I have done some research and heard you can put higher compression flat-top pistons in the 4.3 and gain a few HP. Who makes these pistons? I have done a bunch of searches and come up empty handed. A related question, I have also read that the 4.3 is a 350 minus two cylinders and that the pistons and rods are the same. Is this true or false? -- John WWW.Firewalk-NC.com "Be the change you wish to see in others" ----Gandhi |
#3
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In article ,
says... I have done some research and heard you can put higher compression flat-top pistons in the 4.3 and gain a few HP. Who makes these pistons? I have done a bunch of searches and come up empty handed. A related question, I have also read that the 4.3 is a 350 minus two cylinders and that the pistons and rods are the same. Is this true or false? Almost everything swaps with most 350's. Of course there are 'large jounal' and 'small journal' 350's, and one can't really make more than a generalized statement about the 4.3 262 being a 350 minus two jugs. As for flat top pistons, Geez, everyone makes them for a 4.3, wiseco, TRW, Sealed Power (who is TRW in disguise anyway) Keith Black Silv-O-Lite. It isn't worth your time or trouble unless your motor is already apart. If so, go with forged aluminum. They can take the most abuse, it's all the blower crowd would ever consider. |
#4
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![]() "Gudmundur" wrote in message ... In article , says... I have done some research and heard you can put higher compression flat-top pistons in the 4.3 and gain a few HP. Who makes these pistons? I have done a bunch of searches and come up empty handed. A related question, I have also read that the 4.3 is a 350 minus two cylinders and that the pistons and rods are the same. Is this true or false? Almost everything swaps with most 350's. Of course there are 'large jounal' and 'small journal' 350's, and one can't really make more than a generalized statement about the 4.3 262 being a 350 minus two jugs. As for flat top pistons, Geez, everyone makes them for a 4.3, wiseco, TRW, Sealed Power (who is TRW in disguise anyway) Keith Black Silv-O-Lite. It isn't worth your time or trouble unless your motor is already apart. If so, go with forged aluminum. They can take the most abuse, it's all the blower crowd would ever consider. engine is already apart. This spring when I tuned it up and hooked the hose to it to time it, got LOTS of water in the oil. I bought a long block for it before I took it apart. When I took it apart it was the intake manifold that was screwed. I decided to use the new long block anyway. Putting it together I found a valve cover bolt broken off in the head which I had to drill and ez-out. Got it running and it kept backfiring - found the wrong size pushrod in #6 exhaust. But the straw that broke the camels back was, after 1.5 hrs running the intake rocker arm on number was loose, must have been a stuck lifter. So I have returned the motor and am going to rebuild my old block (or at least plastigage the bearing etc). That is where I am at, I am considering the pistons and need at least a gasket kit. I replaced the 2 bbl intake with a 4 bbl intake and adapter plate for my 2 bbl, hopefully I will get 10- 15 hp from this. With the pistons maybe 10-15 more HP???? Any recommendations where I can purchase the pistons and the gasket kit? |
#5
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Give a call to 'The Bowtie Connection', they are super nice folks
with all kinds of Hi-Perf Chevy parts. The blond gal knows her stuff! I see them every year at Fall Carlisle. Also Jegs, or Summit Racing has nice stuff. If you replace the pistons, you are going to get some machine shop time involved, boring/honing, cleaning. You may get some bucks tied up in your motor, but if it will run W.O.T. all day and not blow apart it was worth it! Drop in new Cleavite bearings, that is a good move even if you are just 'freshening up' a factory size set. Boats are so hard on bottom end parts!!! In article , says... "Gudmundur" wrote in message ... In article , says... I have done some research and heard you can put higher compression flat-top pistons in the 4.3 and gain a few HP. Who makes these pistons? I have done a bunch of searches and come up empty handed. A related question, I have also read that the 4.3 is a 350 minus two cylinders and that the pistons and rods are the same. Is this true or false? Almost everything swaps with most 350's. Of course there are 'large jounal' and 'small journal' 350's, and one can't really make more than a generalized statement about the 4.3 262 being a 350 minus two jugs. As for flat top pistons, Geez, everyone makes them for a 4.3, wiseco, TRW, Sealed Power (who is TRW in disguise anyway) Keith Black Silv-O-Lite. It isn't worth your time or trouble unless your motor is already apart. If so, go with forged aluminum. They can take the most abuse, it's all the blower crowd would ever consider. engine is already apart. This spring when I tuned it up and hooked the hose to it to time it, got LOTS of water in the oil. I bought a long block for it before I took it apart. When I took it apart it was the intake manifold that was screwed. I decided to use the new long block anyway. Putting it together I found a valve cover bolt broken off in the head which I had to drill and ez-out. Got it running and it kept backfiring - found the wrong size pushrod in #6 exhaust. But the straw that broke the camels back was, after 1.5 hrs running the intake rocker arm on number was loose, must have been a stuck lifter. So I have returned the motor and am going to rebuild my old block (or at least plastigage the bearing etc). That is where I am at, I am considering the pistons and need at least a gasket kit. I replaced the 2 bbl intake with a 4 bbl intake and adapter plate for my 2 bbl, hopefully I will get 10- 15 hp from this. With the pistons maybe 10-15 more HP???? Any recommendations where I can purchase the pistons and the gasket kit? |
#6
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concerning summit and Jeggs, I'm always concerned about their nice
glossy catalogueing with phrases like "your low price...." and "The part you want at the price you want to pay....." I've found the best bang for the buck is http://www.pawengineparts.com/ The guys are massivly huge! and cary performance stuff for about anything you can imagine (almost!) Wanna build a stroker out of a 500CID caddilac engine..they got it. you can build your own 426 hemi. etc. etc. very comprehensive inventory and compare prices with Summit and Jegs, and I think you'll find they are verrrrry competetive. Tim |
#7
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I ran flat top pistons in my 350 for a while but could not get away from the
detonation problems. Todays premium gas is about like the old days regular. I went back to the partially dished with a flat top where the squish area is from keith black. KB has the high silicon cast pistons that take a bit more abuse similar to the ones gm puts in it's high end engines.. Forged pistons are the strongest but they have a higher expansion rate and require a looser fit. Makes them a bit trickier to fit correctly in marine applications because marine engines are far less consistent about operating temp. The v6 is basically a v8 minus two cylinders. Not sure exactly what parst are completely interchangable but it doesn't really matter, the aftermarket v6 parts are just about as cheap as the v8 ones. It is handy because a lot of the external bolt pads are the same so the v6 and v8 are easily interchanged. You'd be far better off with a 350 that trying to build up a 6 cyclinder. It takes a whole lot of hp to go faster on the water and the v8 has more heavy duty options like 4 bolt mains. On the water you can't build hp with rpm's like you can on land so on water displacement is everything. All the serious go fast boats have 502's. If you have space in the engine compartment it's probably almost completely a bolt in substitution. "Gorf" wrote in message ... I have done some research and heard you can put higher compression flat-top pistons in the 4.3 and gain a few HP. Who makes these pistons? I have done a bunch of searches and come up empty handed. A related question, I have also read that the 4.3 is a 350 minus two cylinders and that the pistons and rods are the same. Is this true or false? -- John WWW.Firewalk-NC.com "Be the change you wish to see in others" ----Gandhi |
#8
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IMHO I would not go for the 2bbl to 4bbl conversion. It sounds like you
want more power. I would upgrade to multiport fuel injection. I helped my cousin who has a donzi with a 4.3L convert from a carburator to fuel injection. He got the manifold and stuff from a smashed S10 blazer in a junk yard. The computer, distributor and wireing harness came from some place I forget, its been 3 years. We got all the mechanical and electrical done. Got every thing running in the driveway. Took it to the river called the computer people hooked my laptop upto the engine computer they walked me through the programing once we were done he had more HP, better throttle response and better fuel economy to boot. The who process took a weekend to install. and about two hours on and off the phone with tech support to get the computer right. It still runs great today. The only problem was last year the plastic hose from the fuel pressure regulator (under the manifold) cracked. A common problem with the Chevy 4.3L. Paul |
#9
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Problem with that is that the marine mpi is different from the automotive
one and if your cousin's boat catches fire and his insurance figures out what he did they won't pay. "Paul" wrote in message oups.com... IMHO I would not go for the 2bbl to 4bbl conversion. It sounds like you want more power. I would upgrade to multiport fuel injection. I helped my cousin who has a donzi with a 4.3L convert from a carburator to fuel injection. He got the manifold and stuff from a smashed S10 blazer in a junk yard. The computer, distributor and wireing harness came from some place I forget, its been 3 years. We got all the mechanical and electrical done. Got every thing running in the driveway. Took it to the river called the computer people hooked my laptop upto the engine computer they walked me through the programing once we were done he had more HP, better throttle response and better fuel economy to boot. The who process took a weekend to install. and about two hours on and off the phone with tech support to get the computer right. It still runs great today. The only problem was last year the plastic hose from the fuel pressure regulator (under the manifold) cracked. A common problem with the Chevy 4.3L. Paul |
#10
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Tony, don't sound like anyone believes you with the 15hp = 1mph faster! I
do! "tony thomas" wrote in message news:PiKpe.27752$x96.17450@attbi_s72... Unless you are rebuilding the engine anyway, I would not waist my money. It takes a lot of hp to gain any real benefit on the water. Most quote 15 hp to 1 mph. Spend your money on a 350 assuming your boat is 18' or bigger. A 17' will probably run sideways from the torque. Biggest bang for the buck is usually found by going to a good performance SS prop. You can see 5 mph gain with the right prop over a cheap aluminum one. -- Tony my boats and cars at http://t.thomas.home.mchsi.com - "Gorf" wrote in message ... I have done some research and heard you can put higher compression flat-top pistons in the 4.3 and gain a few HP. Who makes these pistons? I have done a bunch of searches and come up empty handed. A related question, I have also read that the 4.3 is a 350 minus two cylinders and that the pistons and rods are the same. Is this true or false? -- John WWW.Firewalk-NC.com "Be the change you wish to see in others" ----Gandhi |
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