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Technical Y block in pre war chassis

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by DesertRat#1, Nov 21, 2018.

  1. DesertRat#1
    Joined: Nov 12, 2018
    Posts: 57

    DesertRat#1
    Member

  2. sunbeam
    Joined: Oct 22, 2010
    Posts: 6,396

    sunbeam
    Member

    From the looks of your 292 it may be a HD truck engine the good news it could have a C1TE forged crankshaft the bad news if it has C1TE rods they are .073 shorter than other 292 rods and used a 1.82 compression height piston. Use C2AE rods will let you use p***enger pistons.If not doing a rebuild compression ratios are around 8 to 1 on 292s in the 60s The truck bellhousing is deeper longer trans input shaft than car. MDL sells a T-5 adapter that lets you use a 94 up Mustang trans.
     
    DesertRat#1 likes this.
  3. DesertRat#1
    Joined: Nov 12, 2018
    Posts: 57

    DesertRat#1
    Member

    You are correct, it is a 1964 truck engine. The Y block book I have educated me about the rod length. If I understand your post, I can use p***enger car rods and pistons and increase the compression a bit? The truck bellhousing shown is going away for a more suitable transmission setup. I am thinking C4 because I had one in my 65 Comet and it rocked. Nothing is off the table at this point. My thoughts are, split ground cam a little stronger and aluminum 4V intake if I can find one. Fabricate my own headers and exhaust and pondering on the carburation leaning to Eddy 500 AVS2 again, I already own one on my other car and I like them. Don't need a race car, just a good sounding good looking period correct (for me) engine bay and so forth. Lots of runway and I am still in the research stage but I will figure it out. Good catch on the motor, already set up oil pan wise and otherwise to go into my pickup.
     
    waxhead likes this.
  4. 56don
    Joined: Dec 11, 2005
    Posts: 10,332

    56don
    Member

    Because SBF engines do not look traditional even though they have been around since 62. A Y block is a good looking engine, a SBF is not. I have a SBF in my 32 and its a great engine but looks out of place to me.
     
    thirtytwo likes this.
  5. czuch
    Joined: Sep 23, 2008
    Posts: 2,688

    czuch
    Member
    from vail az

    Nothing sounds like a Y.
    Put some long gl*** packs on it and that's all the music you'll need.
     
    williebill likes this.
  6. sunbeam
    Joined: Oct 22, 2010
    Posts: 6,396

    sunbeam
    Member

    The governer distributor's advance is pretty limited . The truck pistons and car pistons are both flat top compression ratios are about the same if you are going to rebuild finding HD pistons will be tuff. http://yblockguy.com/techtips/cylinder_head_mods.html
     
  7. OahuEli
    Joined: Dec 27, 2008
    Posts: 5,243

    OahuEli
    Member
    from Hawaii

    The Y block is a great choice and a tough little engine. My avatar had a 0.060 over 292 for years. Ran a 350 cfm Holley and headers, got pretty good gas mileage and sounded great with headers and gl*** packs. Just remember to put the lifters in before you install the cam, timing set, front cover, balancer and oil pan. I learned the hard way...:oops::D
     
    DesertRat#1 likes this.
  8. thirtytwo
    Joined: Dec 19, 2003
    Posts: 2,652

    thirtytwo
    Member

    I wish I could triple like this statement , I don’t understand the brand loyalty in the ford in a ford guys, if they mean keep it somewhat original with a flattie I get that , but cutting it up for a late model motor that isn’t supposed to be there would seem to make the brand insignificant?
     

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