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#1 |
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Dan,
A couple right off the bat,,, The 1968 Ford Cobra-Jet 428/335 HP NHRA re-factored it to 360 HP immediately, which sounds about right on.. The 1968 340/275 HP, if the Horsepower remained at what the factory stated, the 1968 Barracuda or Dart GTS would have been classed in G/Stock instead of E/Stock in 1968. The NHRA re-factored the 340 to 310 HP even before the 1968 Winternationals. Again a fair HP rating. 1964/1965 Mopar 426/365 HP 'S' Street-Wedge. Completely over-rated Horsepower, 10.0 - 1 Compression Ratio Mild hydraulic camshaft,,,.(431/.431 Lift, w/268* duration) Standard cylinder heads (#2406516 castings) (2.08" intake / 1.60" exhaust) (Small-port exhaust) These cylinder heads were the same found on the 361/265 HP 2-Barrel engines Weak valve springs Horrible flowing cast iron intake manifold Carter AFB rated at 575 CFM Horsepower for the 426/365 HP 'S' Street-Wedge, rating probaby closer to 300 to 310 HP. Scary fact; In 1964 and 1965, the 64' Plymouth 426 'S' Belvedere and/or 'Sport Fury' ran in A/S or A/SA. In 1966, it was classed in B/S or B/SA, versus the 66' 427/425 HP Biscaynes and 66' Galaxie 500's 427/425 HP cars. In 1967, back into A/S or A/SA, versus the 67' Chevelle S396 396/375 HP cars. In 1968, C/S or C/SA, against the 68' 428 Cobra-Jet Mustangs. Talk about a 'tough challenge', they didn't stand a chance. Last edited by Paul Ceasrine; 12-14-2011 at 07:00 PM. |
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#2 |
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Paul: Your reply got me thinking. If the 340 was refactored before it ever hit an NHRA event, how did that happen? I've heard stories of how sharp the Farmer was but I doubt he'd set a factor just by reading a magazine article or two. Did he look at the specs and come pretty close to the real HP? Big difference between now and then!
Moose: I'm with you on the 440 Six Pack. The ones around here were pretty quick indeed. But I'm thinking it worked the other way with the 340 Six Pack. I don't think that engine, as produced, needed anywhere near that much carb - and that was just about the only real modification they made. Especially since they were only in the heavier E body, I'd bet they didn't want anything to do with a 340 Dart or Duster. We had a pretty active street scene around here even though it was a small town. Two friends used to duke it out numerous times a week. Eddie had a 66 427/425 Corvette and Fred had a 66 Coronet Hemi 4 spd. Both were pretty capable with a wrench. It was fun to watch since neither car could claim bragging rights. One car would win 3 out of 4 on the street but the other would win 3 out of 4 at the strip. I honestly can't remember which was which other than I'd bet the Corvette had the street advantage since the independent rear would squat and probably hook better on an unprepared surface. Even though I can't remember either car winning by more than a fender, this was long before redlights and who knows about a street start. They sure were a joy to watch. |
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#3 |
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Dan,
340/275 HP, horsepower re-factor to 310 HP. Not sure on how the NHRA knew, but they did. Chrysler Performance was informed of the rating back in December 1967. Thats when the Southern California Dodge Dealers started building the E/S Dart GTS that Bill Shrewsberry raced. The #3150 lb. 68' 340 Dart GTS and 340 Barracuda's still were successful in E/S and E/SA, running 12.80's. Imagine them running in G/S in 1968,,,,,,, ![]() |
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#4 |
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I know we're supposed to be talking about racing here but I just have to say that the Mopar Six Pack option is one of the things that make America great. It is just the most stupid good fun ever put in a street car. Anyone who's ever driven one on the street knows what I'm talking about--those outboards are vacuum activated insanity!!! I'm too young and weak to have driven one with drum brakes but even still whoooooo!!!!
Chris Barnes Wagons of Steel Stock 6621 |
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#5 | |
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OK, that makes more sense now that you give the dates. In December 67 the 68s would have been on sale for a few months. As crazy as things were back then, I wouldn't be surprised if one of the competing manufacturers got access to a 340 and made sure that NHRA Tech was aware of the numbers the car ran. Just as a courtesy, of course. ![]() |
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#6 | |
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__________________
Arnold Greene IHRA/NHRA 2420 A/S, B/S |
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#7 |
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To Tell The Truth,
The whole batch of 'B and' RB' engines had over-rated Horsepower figures from the factory. The 383 (330 and 325 HP engines) were much closer to 275 Horsepower. The 383 (335 HP Road Runner and Super Bee engines) were much closer to 290 Horsepower. Of course the 68' 440 cylinder heads, camshaft, valve springs and exhaust manifolds were worth an additional 15 HP. The 426/365 HP 'Street Wedge', closer to 300 HP. The 440/375 HP, still high,,,,,,,more in-line with 360 HP. |
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#8 | |
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Unless they were installing Stahl headers on the Corvette line, I ain't buying it. Which brings to mind my candidate for most underrated: L88 427/430. Even with Tonawanda's inconsistent build quality, that had to be 100 hp low. |
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#9 |
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Dan
The 1968 '340 GTS' Darts were rolling off the Los Angeles assembly line in August 1967. So it was not suprising to see one running at one of the drag strips in D/S or D/SA in 1967, before the NHRA re-factored them to 310 HP for 1968, and re-set the stock classes. Same thing with the 383 Road Runner and Super Bee, as they started showing up in late-October 1967. They fell into the 1967 class of B/S or B/SA. 1968 found them in E/S or E/SA, same class as the 340 GTS Darts and 340 Barracuda's. pc |
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#10 |
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A few years ago I remember seeing a graph of the actual in-house Chrysler HP numbers for the 440 6 packs in '69. The 390 HP rating was taken at a mid-high rpm, and I think it topped out @ 440-450 HP at the peak HP/RPM range, I seem to remember a 444 HP run. I'll see if I can find it and post it.
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