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Wicked Windsor In A Box

RDI's custom crate motor delivers a blend of Cup car technology and crate motor value
By David Vizard
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The APT Wire Wizard, which puts all the plug cables in the same order as the cylinders, added the finishing touches to this 392-inch RDI custom crate motor. With looks matching its performance, this torque monster delivered 515 lb-ft of torque and 504 totally streetable horsepower.
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Preston Miller and one of his custom crate motors. This one is destined for a well-known and prestigious Cobra kit manufacturer.
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Here are the factors necessary to optimize so as to make the most of a cam selection: 1) Intake lobe lift. 2 ) Intake lobe flank, indicated is the opening but the same applies to the closing side. 3) Intake opening duration. 4) Exhaust lobe lift. 5) Exhaust lobe flank. 6) Exhaust opening duration. 7) Lobe Centerline Angle (LCA). 8) Direction of adjustment for advance and retard. 9) Overlap. The rockers also play a significant roll and affect the final cam events required. For instance using a higher ratio rocker on the intake alters the required LCA for optimum performance.
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Used extensively on Winston Cup engines, the ATI Super Damper was chosen as a proven piece to aid longevity of the crank and increase power by reducing the negative effects of torsionals on the cam events.
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Canfields heads were used because of the appropriate port size for the displacement used and the good out-of-the-box flow figures. Equipping it were Ferrea valves, Isky adjustable pushrod guide plates, and Comp Cams beehive springs with titanium retainers.
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As received from Canfield the seats were intended for use with 2.02 intake valves. The RDI Street Pro was going to use Ferrea 2.05/1.6 valves so the seats were cut accordingly.
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Valves installed and ready to go. The Canfield heads come stock with the chambers CNC machined as seen here.
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Here is the finished seat job. Also note the smooth form and finish of the ports. This is part of the reason these Canfields flow well for a relatively small port.
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The Canfield heads were put through a battery of tests on the flow bench. This included flow, swirl, and port velocity measurements. The results were good in every category.
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Flow is shown by the darker curves. Port velocity is indicated by the upper light colored curves, and swirl by the lower light colored curve. At the 600 thousandths it would be lifted to the intake valve passed some 265 cfm on an accurately calibrated bench. No measurable swirl existed until some 350 thousandths lift, but after that it came on strong. The indications here is the Canfield heads will favor a higher lift as it will help low-end as well as top-end power. At the valve lift to be used the swirl was significantly better than most Ford heads, aftermarket on not. Intake port velocity was also good. For an 'as-cast' port the exhaust showed excellent results throughout the lift range and delivered 182 cfm at the 550 thousandths full lift to be used. Also worthy of note is the exhaust ports excellent velocity. This is a major factor toward countering low-speed reversion. As well as a healthy top end, good low speed performance was expected from these heads and that is just what we got.
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The Probe pistons were light and well made. As a stock feature these pistons have valve cutouts for both conventional valve position heads as per the Canfields being used and TFS Twisted Wedge heads
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At its asking price the Scat 4340 H-beam rods are a bargain. Additionally it appears some attention has been paid to trimming excess weight from non- critical areas and, as a result, the rod is measurably lighter than most of it's competitors.
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Here the RDI custom crate motor block is being treated to a 4.030- inch bore. The boring machine indexes off the mains to ensure the required alignment is accurate.
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This is the heart of the 392 stroker, a Scat cast steel 3.850 stroke crankshaft. These cranks are ground on the same machines as the cranks that Scat make for Winston Cup and Top Fuel dragster applications.
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Because the 392 Street Pro's bottom-end assembly was close to what Scat envisaged as a typical rod and piston weight the crank needed only marginal drilling to get it to perfect balance.
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The ATI Super Damper was equipped with the required 28-ounce-per-inch balance offset for the stroker Windsor application.
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The Total Seal gapless top ring has one ring nested within the other to provide an effective 100 percent sealing capability. Our tests show this ring seals so well the second compression ring can be dispensed with if an oil control ring is used that can handle the full oil control function on it's own.
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To make the compression/leak down comparison with the Total Seal Rings the conventional rings were meticulously gapped at two-thousandths above what we know to be the minimum before ring end butting occurs. When that happens the top of the piston usually comes off.
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Selective assembly at this point meant each rod, piston, and bearing set where now assigned to a bore. This selective assembly produced tight control over piston to wall and bearing clearances.
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Once all the clearances were established the final assembly could be started. Here the bearings are being installed and coated with an assembly lube.
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When installing the rear main seal (arrowed) it is advisable to smear oil on the seal and the crank surface it runs on.
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End float on the crank was right on the five-thousandths called for on the build sheet.
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With just the right size chamfer on the top of the block the Probe Pistons and Total Seal rings installed easily and smoothly with a regular ring compressor.
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If an engine build is to be successful the selection of the right cam for the job (as opposed to "a cam") is critical. The wrong choice here will easily cost 30 lb-ft and 30 hp, which will just about negate the potential of the extra cubes a stroker crank delivers.
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Rocker choice was an important factor toward the production of the outstanding torque/power curve of the 392 RDI Street Pro motor. The black rocker is a 1.7:1 for the intake, while the lighter is 1.6 for the exhaust.
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Motor Machine & Supply's cam guru, Denny Wyckoff, modeled the project motor on Cam Master. This unique cam-computing program eliminates the need to dyno test a multiplicity of cams to get the right one for the job. What it means is the average hot rodder can for $40 get the same results as Bob Glidden and $20,000 worth of cams and dyno time.
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The more optimally a cam is spec'd for the application, the more critical it is to time it in correctly. Having got the cam spec optimized via the computer it becomes essential to time it in correctly. This is one more move made with RDI's custom crate motors that would not be done with a regular crate motor.

"But the market," he says, "is getting more sophisticated, and there is a growing demand for a more technically advanced crate motor. At RDI we are in an excellent position to blend value and up-to-the-minute power technology. This is how our custom crate motor program came into being."

The commonly accepted definition of a crate motor is a selected collection of parts that will produce cost-effective results. Part of the cost-cutting deal is the factory produces them by the hundreds if not thousands. Just how power orientated these parts are varies considerably.

What RDI's custom program does is pick on a crate motor's weakest links and fix them. This not only allows tailoring more toward the customers needs, but also focuses on the most cost-effective upgrades first.

I pitched my requirements to Preston over the phone and imagined sweat generated by my demands running down his brows. "At RDI we are just shy of performing miracles, but yes, we can do pretty much what you are looking for here." So the wheels of industry clunked into gear and things began to happen. Motor Spec
After all the factors involved had been duly considered, starting from top to bottom, the build spec was arrived upon. Carburetion was to be by way of one of Barry Grants bigger Demon units. For an intake manifold a Ford Racing/Edelbrock Victor Jr. would be used. The induction system would feed into a set of out-of-the-box Canfield heads. The valvetrain, by Comp Cams, would be a hydraulic roller with the cam events spec'd out by Motor Machine & Supply's unique cam computation program. This program has the capability to produce the optimum cam events specifically for the motor in question first-time around, thus eliminating the need to flog cams to find the best.

Because of the ports generally efficient form, they tend to produce peak power at a higher mean port velocity than many out-of-the-box heads on the market. The typical for an as-cast factory head is around 280 with good aftermarket pieces running about 305-315 ft/sec. Experience with Canfield heads under near ideal conditions has shown peak power occurring at as high as 325 ft/sec. Throwing this number and the heads 193cc intake port volume into a simple computer program indicated the 392 Street Pro motor would hit peak power and torque at 5,611 and 4,320 rpm respectively. This looked to effectively target the 5,500-5,700 rpm peak power called for.

Also shown in Figure 1 are the swirl figures for the intake and the often talked about, but never shown, port velocities for both the intake and exhaust. I would like to have seen the swirl come on sooner in the lift range, but once it did start the swirl was strong. I suspected that good intake-port velocity, because of the larger cylinder it was to feed, would compensate for any possible shortfall of low lift swirl.

Complementing the pistons was a set of Scat H-beam rods and a cast steel stroker crank. An option here would be to go for a 4340 forged steel crank. However, I have run a number of Scat cast steel stroker cranks in Chevy road-race motors at power levels up to 565 hp and 7,500 rpm. One of my motors running in England now has three successful seasons on it and has yet to be torn down for any reason. The bottom line is, I am comfortable with the Scat cranks, which are ground on exactly the same machines in Scat's California plant as the Winston Cup and Top Fuel cranks they make. The same can't be said for some of the other brands of cast steel cranks.

With the rings, pistons, and rods assembled it was now time to install the rotating assembly into the block. All the dimensional checks that had been carried out on the block, crank, and bearings had already established the clearances that would exist. Any bearing clearances that did not fall between the closer tolerances than a stock build were remedied by bearing shell selection. This type of meticulous assembly is just one more example of the difference between a regular crate motor and what we are dealing with here.

The usual technique to get the right valve events is to take your best guess and grind that and a number of other cams either side of it, then test for results. If you are good you can hit a near optimal cam in three to maybe five goes and a couple of days of testing. Another alternative is to simply run with an experienced person's best guess. The first is, too, costly for most of us, and the second, depending on whose guess it was, can be considerably less than optimal.

How accurate is it? About as accurate as having unlimited dyno time and unlimited access to whatever cams are needed. Going the dyno/multiple cam test route would cost a minimum of about $1,000 to over $20,000 and takes anywhere between a day and a month, or so. With Motor Machines computation method you get the answers in 20 minutes or less and all for $40! I suspect anyone with an IQ of 80 or more would figure out which way would be the fastest and easiest route to optimizing the cam events here.

The flow figures, bore, stroke, rod length, CR, and all the other figures required were fed to Motor Machines cam guru, Denny Wyckoff. The specs even take into account how much the nitrous was to be biased toward with or without operation. Here I elected to take a middle of the road course and had the cam spec'd about 15 percent in favor of the nitrous. This would mean a small drop in output (an estimated 5-8 hp) while the nitrous was not in operation but about a 15-20 hp increase when it was.

To see the true worth of this motor I suggest you catch next month's issue, and see how this it fared on one of Charlotte's successful Busch Grand National engine builder's dyno, not only in terms of peak power and torque, but also fuel efficiency and crank torsionals.

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A Comp Cams multi-keyway roller chain sprocket set was used to handle the cam timing chores. This allowed the Comp Cams camshaft to be timed in to better than 1 degree of the spec required.
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The oil pump set screw of the stock capacity Melling oil pump is adjusted to a set dimension to deliver 60 psi hot.
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A Canton 351 drag pan and pickup to fit Fox-bodied applications was used to eliminate the possibility of oil starvation due to surge when leaving the start line at 1.5 or more g.
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The Canton pan was an off-the shelf item from RDI and, after checking through some inspection holes, it was found the longer stroke of the Scat crank called for some minor clearancing of the crank oil scraper.
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After installing the FelPro head gaskets, the heads were dropped in place and secured with a set of ARP head bolts.
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Once the rockers/pushrods were in the correct location the rocker studs were tightened down. After provisional tightening the rocker was removed and the stud torqued to the required setting. Note the CC beehive springs and the mini titanium retainers.
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To save time and get the job done right these Isky adjustable guide plates were used so that prefect alignment of the rockers over the valves could be achieved.
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After completing the valvetrain the intake manifold (Victor Jr./Ford Racing) was installed.
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The alignment between the CNC port entrance of the Canfield heads and the intake manifold was almost perfect.
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Performance Distributors out of Memphis, Tennessee, make the HEI conversion for the SB Ford motor. It will fire a 75 thousandths plug gap to way more rpm than the bottom end can run and has minimal spark scatter. Best of all it is totally self-contained and requires only a one wire hook up.
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The bigger diameter body of the Performance Distributors HEI means it is a close fit to the intake manifold, but at the end of the day there is room--just.
ATI Performance Products Inc.
Baltimore
MD

www.atiperformanceproducts.com
Probe Industries
www.probeindustries.com
Canfield Cylinder Heads
580 West Main Street,
Canfield
OH  44406
Raceparts Distribution Inc.
19450 Zion Street, P.O.
Cornelius
NC  28031
Canton Racing Products SCAT Enterprises Inc.
Redondo Beach
CA

www.scatcrankshafts.com
Competition Cams
www.compcams.com
Total Seal Inc.
www.totalseal.com
Barry Grant Inc. MAC Performance Parts
43214 Blackdeer Loop,
Temecula
CA  92590-3473
Ferrea Racing Components Iskenderian Racing Cams
www.iskycams.com
Motor Machine & Supply
1401 West Glen, Dept. MMFF
Tucson
AZ  85705
Advanced Performance Technology
595 Iowa Avenue, Dept. MMFF
Riverside
CA  92507
MSD Ignition
490 Harry Brennan Dr.
El Paso
TX  79936

www.msdignition.com
Wire Wizard Ultra Pro Machining
6350 Brookshire Boulevard,
Charlotte
NC  28216
Performance Distributors
www.performancedistributors.com

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