Over the past few years I have gone thru the '73 Challenger that I bought some years ago...it was in far worse condition that I thought when I bought it. I think that is pretty typical.
I installed most of the Hotchkis suspension parts which has given the car a go kart feel which is what I wanted but certainly did not help front to rear weight transfer but I did not set out to build a strip car.
Eventually I made some changes to the engine to make it more streetable than it initially was....mostly I just matched up the combination so that things worked better together.
Last summer, I started to think it was really weak compared to my turbo Buicks and had a lot of conversations with CP. My first decision was to buy a set of Stealth heads and I was going to deck them to about 75 cc and do a little porting on them. Right after I got the heads and a set of PRW stainless rockers, I saw an ad from CME and after doing some research on them, I decided to say the heck with it and just order a complete engine. I sent them the heads that I had ordered with the usual upgrades.
The combination is totally different from what I would spec and i still keep looking at the numbers and think that with a few tweaks this would be a strong engine..but, it would neither fit the chassis set up or the fact that I have a 32 year old son that is not as mechanically inclined as I am or used to be
Anyway, the engine is a 4.375" square stroker with the Stealth heads, 10-1 CR using KB forged pistons, 4340 crank/rods, 238 deg cam with 0.536" lift, an Eddy RPM intake, and a 780 Quick Air vacuum carb.
Definitely not what I would spec...but the numbers look like a diesel plot and I think it will work perfectly for what I want for this car...may be more like a drift car-sideways at any speed....
I hate to post the numbers right above Al's build but they do show what combination is all about. I thought they were interesting.