Originally Posted by Bad340fish
Can cranking compression give any indicator as to what you can get away with? My motor is a 10:1 W2 headed 416. The pistons have a nice smooth dish and no quench. Solid roller, 270ish @.050 off the top of my head, last cranking compression was 165. I just got it running again after a fresh valve job and replacing an incredibly worn timing chain so I need to check it again. It makes about 575-600HP now and has no trouble on 91 octane with 40* of timing WOT.

I had a 340 that was 10:1, quench motor, 243@.050 hydraulic flat tappet with rhoads clickety clack lifters. It cranked like 210psi and ran on 93 octane.

I would like to bump the compression up on the 416 on the next refresh but I do not have the budget or desire to run race gas since It is a street car. I do have E70 available in town and the fuel system to support it but I get mixed reviews about ethanol and limited use street cars(I don't drive it near as much as would like to).

My old 446" motor w/ Indy heads is over 14:1 compression (Ross domes and the heads have been shaved a lot). The old roller cam in it was around 262/268 at fifty on a 106 LSA and it cranked at 275 psi. Changed to a custom roller from Dwayne Porter w/ 274 at fifty duration on a 108 LSA and it cranks 185 psi now. I don't think I'll be trying pump gas in it, lol. My hemi at 11:1 w/ 275/284 at fifty on a 112 LSA also cranks 185 psi.


CHIP
'70 hemicuda, 575" Hemi, 727, Dana 60
'69 road runner, 440-6, 18 spline 4 speed, Dana 60
'71 Demon, 340, low gear 904, 8.75
'73 Chrysler New Yorker, 440, 727, 8.75
'90 Chevy 454SS Silverado, 476" BBC, TH400, 14 bolt
'06 GMC 2500HD LBZ Duramax