Rob C
Well-Known Member
Sorry, none at all personnaly. I have a 318 on a stand awaiting funds. (LOL!)Thanks Cranky. Good advice for next time.
Rumble, got any experience with the 318 stroked at stock bore?
Sorry, none at all personnaly. I have a 318 on a stand awaiting funds. (LOL!)Thanks Cranky. Good advice for next time.
Rumble, got any experience with the 318 stroked at stock bore?
+1 If this were the original motor for the car, I could see going this route.
But at this point? Cut bait and buy a crate.
Or, so you can drive the car, find a cheap used, running motor to throw in there for now...318, 360, whatever.....and save up the pennies for what you want so you can get it at a later date but still drive the car and enjoy it.
Why not get a 88-92 360 from a wrecker for $200 or os & start with that , the 360 makes a lot more torque or you could stroke that for the cost of buying parts to rebuild anyway
The 340 was nothing like the 302. The 302 even came with a solid lifter cam and produced 290 hp. Yeah, the 302 was very high strung for the day. I've had a few 340 powered cars and didn't have any problem with low end performance even with 3.23 gears. Now if you were talking about the 6 pack 340 being somewhat high strung then yeah, I'll agree with that but even it had decent street manners....Hi I'm new to the site but it looks like there are a lot of opinions out there, and too much rocket science for a question that was pretty simple. So here is my 2 cents from experience. The 340 has been discontinued for about 40 years now. The 340, like the chevy 302 was designed to make horsepower at high rpm at the expense of low end torque. I don't know about you but I got tired of hearing that thing scream. Also , if the engine shows any history of being apart , you don't know if it was rebuilt because of high miles, failure from overheating, which also is the number one cause of vehicle breakdown, And the quality of the machine work done by someone else. Since it seems that you already bought the engine, I guess you will find out from the machine shop what you got. The 340 has a thin cylinder wall and does not lend it self to being beat on after a rebuild for very long. If this is for the street. With occasional high rpm use get a Mopar crate motor. A lot lower final cost,all new parts,factory warranty, What is better than that? And you won't have to worry about the quality of the finished product. Just my 2 cents.
I'm with the others about 2200.00 in just the bottom end. What's he doing for that kind of money?Update! I got the shortblock 340 to the machine shop for a clean and inspection. More bad news. 6 of the 8 pistons had cracks in them and it needs a .060 bore to clean it up. My guy says $2200 for a rebuild of the bottom end and that's just polishing the cast crank which is already .010/.010. I think I'll let him bore it and polish the crank and align bore it. Then take my time and build it back myself. Not ready for that kind of investment with paint, body, and interior left to do. To think, this was going to be an easy project. I don't know if I can afford to have this much fun.
That includes the machining, boring to .060, new bearings, polishing the crank, new pistons, oil pump, windage tray, and balanced assembly. It figures to about $1100 for the machine work and $1100 for parts and assembly. That also includes the $140 that I owe for the cleaning and inspection. Bargain or no?