71Polara
New Member
yeah its a 8 3/4
I get that but its a real dog. I got beat by my friend's mom's grand caravan with 200k on the clock and a 4 cylinder. Just want it to be little quicker
Crawl underneath and see what ratio is on the tag.yeah its a 8 3/4
yeah its a 8 3/4
I have a 440 laying around that was for a different project, would the swap be worth it? It has the small block 727 so I would need a different trans and driveshaft.
Rather than the 440, a good stroker LA would be a much better and more "bolt-in" situation.
If the driveshaft location can stay the same will that move the engine farther forward of its factory position? Also I was told the back halfs on BB and SB 727's are the same so can that also be reused?
Big block and small block 727 have a different bolt pattern on the engine mounting side and the flex plates are usually different. The rear shaft on a big block is a heavier unit and the tail shaft housings do not interchange without changing the rear shaft. You probably would not want to run the lighter unit behind a big block in any case. Best bet is to find the correct big block transmission. If you plan to keep your current rear end, be sure to keep the speedo drive gear out of you current transmission as that will work in either transmission. This will keep you speedo accurate. Most small blocks had 904 transmission except for police cruisers and some trucks.
Dave
Here are the measurements of a 727 SB from the Summit site. Click on mail 0014 not the icon.
Dave
I'm referring to production numbers. So many 727s on small blocks. To say most came with 904s I can not accept.
In any case the OP can use these measurements to compare. The 904 and 727 also have different pan configurations.
Dave
I get that but its a real dog. I got beat by my friend's mom's grand caravan with 200k on the clock and a 4 cylinder. Just want it to be little quicker