It won't see a track or a strip, just looking for more torque on road use.Depends what you’re doing, the 1968 L88 ran the same basic drive train as the bottom of the range small block.
Improved engine 'breathing' is your answer. Cylinder heads are the very first area for attention. You need to look for port flow rates that give the best figures at lower and mid rpms. Camshaft selection needs maximise the benefits of the head design - ideally opening valves as quick as possible (within reason) - keeping open for as long as possible and closing quickly so you get the maximum cylinder filling. High valve lift doesn't always mean better cylinder filling. Carb size is relatively unimportant........if carb is jetted correctly engine will only take what it needs. Obviously a good dual plane inlet should be used (or better still MPI injection) A 'stroker' 383 cu in engine will yield great results with the above mods. Expect close to 400 hp.Thanks for that gents.
So, the 64 million $ question...
Which engine would be better to have for torque on a driver car or would (as James said) it be better to modify an engine to get the best balance between torque and fuel economy?
Fantastic, thank you.1971 and 72 were about the same in makeup
The real nut buster is the (RPO) LS6 which is a 454 CI at Gross and also
(GM used Brake HP ratings) 425 HP at whooping 475 lt/lb torque at 4,000 RPMs
Notice the 2 different carb brands and versions they used depending on engine and output
So you know exactly the design I am including below a GM engineering design and service manual, 165 pages of knowledge in a PDF
Also show the different in output as if having the auto or manual trannys
So make sure you click on it below and save this PDF and read it all this spring