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85scorpion 01-22-2012 09:57 AM

Well I just heard back from the seller and he said the motor was built by David Dewey, anyone heard of him? It was rebuilt quite a while ago and has sit for the last 8 years with l only a couple hours put on it. He didn't remember the internals that were built but he said there is an aluminum ilstreet dominator intake, Chevy bow tie heads, pistons, roller rocker arms, Holley double pump carb and osco exhaust risers. He didn't remember the specs on the internals replaced but knew at least that much was replaced. I asked him to recheck the compression with a different gauge when he gets a chance and he's still reading 190 to just shy of 200... Thoughts?

sprink58 01-22-2012 10:19 AM

It may be camed with a duration/overlap that is building a lot of cylinder pressure. Without having the Cam card from the cam grinder anything is a guess.

When it's running does it have a seriously "lumpy" idle or does it idle out ok at around 800 RPM? I say set the timing at 32 deg total advance and run it...don't beat on it but run it out a few times and see how it responds in your boat. If it has a terrible low end and is a real top end screamer you can easily re-cam it to something more drivable...then again it might turn out to be just right for your use.

Good luck with this...hope it works out for you.

85scorpion 01-22-2012 10:33 AM

It's has a nice loppy idle, alot more than my stock 350.

Raylar 01-22-2012 02:00 PM

If the engine has a fairly loppey idle I would suspect it has a fairly moderate duration camshaft which if normally installed should not generate static cranking compressions like those. Remember this engine was built 8-10 years ago and back then 93 or higher octane fuel was readily available and much cheaper. The GM bow-tie heads with the smaller 64 cc combustion chambers and a flat top piston in this engine could generate some pretty good compression ratios and numbers like these. If the heads are iron heads and this engine has the higher than recommended compression ratio for regular pump gas the engine under load may be a detonation "time bomb" without high octane fuel and very conservative iginition advance. I would not set up an iron small block engine in a marine engine use with compression higher than lets say 9.5 to 1 to run on readily available 89-91 pump gas. I know there are ways to run higher with special timing, aluminum heads and higher octane fuel but these are not really practical builds, and in this case I don't think those thoughts were even on the radar for this particular engine. Hope this puppy has the aluminum Bow-tie heads.

Was this David Dewey an expierenced marine engine builder or just a local high performance street and rod engine builder?

Best Regards,
Ray @ Raylar

85scorpion 01-22-2012 02:25 PM

According to the shop owner hes a well known guy in the Orlando area and did some great work? He said the timing is at 10* at tdc.

85scorpion 01-22-2012 02:31 PM

So from what you said, 93 octane may need to be run in the motor to prevent detonation?

Raylar 01-22-2012 02:44 PM

When in Doubt-Check it Out!
 
85scorpian:

I can't say here for sure because we really don't have all the facts and parts specs.. The timing you quoted sounds like initial timing advance which is not excessive or really the problem. It will be what the real compression ratio is, whether the heads are iron or aluminum and what the total timing advance will be at lets say 3000 rpms under load.
This engine isn't going to detonate at idle, low rpms or under light loads, it will do it under full loads at midrange and high rpms. If this occurs, timing curves and limits can be moved back and fueling can be somewhat richened and higher octane used to counter these possible effects. There are some options here, but knowing where you are at to begin with is important before you go put'tin the hammer down on this puppy!
Total timing can be measured and plotted from the engine and a timing light degree readout. Its pretty easy to see or know if heads are aluminum or iron, a magnet will tell that quickly if they are painted.
Just take some time now and insure you will be using this engine in the boat in mode as reliable and safe as possible to protect your investment and eliminate a season ending problem.

Best Regards,
Ray @ Raylar

85scorpion 01-22-2012 03:12 PM

I couldn't ask for better advice, thanks Ray! I may pick your mind again later!


Jason

Griff 01-23-2012 01:50 AM


Originally Posted by 85scorpion (Post 3598746)
Really? Never thought of that. It was running on 93 when they did the test and when I saw it running today. I didn't hear any detonation or anything... What kind of symptoms would i see if it didn't agree w pump gas?

You can't hear detonation with headers or open exhaust. Detonation happens with the engine under load and not when free reving it.


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