bajajoaquin
Senior Member
451 stroker!
I respectfully differ. You don’t have to have a need to compensate, or to swing something, to want to accelerate fast from standstill or to pass quickly at speed. Gearing will deal with the former, not as much with the latter. Speed limits have no bearing on those little pleasures.
IMHO, it is the OP’s car to do as he wishes, but he’s asking, so I am all for keeping this beautiful original as is. At the same time, I understand where he’s coming from. But if speed matters to him more than preserving a very rare original open top, then the OP should either get a second car with a big engine (if funds allows) or sell this ‘vert and replace it with a high powered car. I am sure there will be interested buyers (hint, hint).
PS: is this the same car?
Thanks for confirming and providing more history about the car. It seems to be a _very_ nice one, apparently one of the few original ones left! We’ve seen quite a few ‘69 ragtops pop up in bad shape, but extremely few like yours. You’ve got something special, I’d keep it that way
Would you be so kind as to post more photos of your car? The ones in that old thread have disappeared.
Bingo!! That is the main motivation for me wanting a 383. People say I won't like the lack of torque; I think I can live with it.If you mainly want a nice cruiser, the 383 offers reasonable fuel mileage. You are going to be lucky to get 9 mpg with a 440 build, something to consider if you plan to drive the car a lot, probably also looking at premium fuel.
Dave
See my previous response. Gas mileage is it in a nutshell. I got 18 MPG in my '62 New Yorker. My parents averaged 17 with their 383 HP '65 Newport. The best I have ever seen in my '70 was 15, and the average on the highway is 12. Around town I am lucky to get 140 miles on a full tank of gas. That sucks!I'm down near Walnut Creek. You're living in God's Country up there compared to the Bay Area.
Anyway, the suggestion (above) about pickling the 383 (with its numbers) might be the way to go. However, your wanting to downsize to a 383 is an interesting proposition.
Can you share with the group what your thinking has been and why you want to go that direction? Maybe you're on to something that will make having a 383 a good idea...
OK, now here is something that just cracks me up. I go to a car show, and on the way home, while driving 70-75 as the car was designed to do, I'm passing up all the guys driving 55. What's up with that?? Do people actually think their car will be hurt by driving faster?You’ll still drive it 55 mph on the highway
that's a damn nice conversion.The decisions was easy. The 440 came from my parts car so everything was there.