In my case, on the Hurst, it's not the stock 350 hp 440, but the 375 HP TNT version, like the Super Commando in Plymouth and Magnum motor in Dodge. It has much different exhaust manifolds (factory headers, if you will) that sweep up above the spark plugs and are very close to the valve covers compared to the 'log' manifolds that are much lower and further away from the valve covers on lower performance engines.
Yeah the HiPo manifolds, in my 440 6bbl that was a transplant for a 383HP motor I'm sure the C-Body 383 HiPo manifolds were used and these days learned that 383 and 440 HiPo manifolds were different part numbers as the 440 is a RB motor. I had no problems with the exhaust bolting up, but when I got the car it was leaking around the flat manifold flange gasket and my thinking is they just used the old gaskets when the engine was swapped, not a lot but just that tick sound. I replace them with quality gaskets & quality new bolts & nuts, done deal.
I used to have a bunch (like 3 pairs) of old cast iron HiPo manifolds, but (I guess) only for B or E bodies, didn't know or care about the numbers, they were all pretty rusty from sitting outside in a pile of take-offs, picked them up for next to nothing, even had a set of rusty old headers from a Road Runner, not for the Fury, tried installing them once... gave up. In the 80's couldn't even give the HiPo manifolds away back then to the 'header' crowd, tossed them into the metal scrap bin down at the recycling facility.
About the closest time I came to owning a set of 'logs' was when I got a 1968 Dodge Monaco 2dr Fastop that had a seized 383 2bbl in it free for the price of the flat bed tow (which was a tune-up of my buddy's Honda 750/4). I was in need of a stub frame as my frame got bent from a high speed off road spin out and when I straightened the frame I didn't use any heat and it cracked bad years later.
Welp come to find out this Monaco had been in a serious head on crash and been hack repaired by some hokey body shop. First thing to find out was why did the engine seize... well come to find out that the sway bar had rubbed through the oil filter and the previous no maintenance owner (alky co-worker) just kept on driving it till it seized LOL... Well I thought maybe the engine mounts are shot... but then when I was laying on the interior floor checking out something under the dash (A/C?) I got soaking wet from the carpet and we didn't notice this when I picked up the car as it was winter and everything was frozen and by then it had thawed out in a heated garage. I go... oh no what's going on here... come to find out that were they used a <ahem> Port-A-Power to push out the lower A pillar door jamb area that the head of the port-a-power punched a hole through the body panel, not in one place but a couple... LAFF, that's where the water was coming in... BUT WAIT THERES MORE! When I tried rolling down the driver side rear window I found that it would go only down half way vs the passenger side that went all the way down. Upon investigation (removing seat & interior panel) I could see the quarter panel was crashed in not allowing the window mechanism to bring the window down all the way. Looking more... the frigg'in car was crashed from headlight to taillight seriously and they ran out of money (gave up) and they just filled the whole quarter panel in with bondo without any attempt to pull the panel, I mean not like a gallon but a 5 gallon pail.
By then I knew I couldn't trust the stub frame so the car was a total waste of time so we grabbed some beers and the group of us gave it the sledge hammer. I wailed on the bondo panel straight on with a 1/2 dozen hits, didn't even crack it or dislodge anything, it wasn't till I gave it a top down angle hit that a large chunk of bondo came off and it was like 6 inches thick right at the driver side rear window area. We chipped away at it more well back to past the wheel well, thick thick... LAFF Think I got a hundred bucks for the scrap yard to come tow it away, a least that paid for the beers. heh
There was a thought of putting my 440 into the Dodge... But a Plymouth person driving a Dodge? HELL NO!
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