Hi Guys,
Sorry for the delay. Been a stressful week at work trying to make money to pay for all of this stuff! So I'm sort of out of my comfort zone on calculating compression rations admittedly. In fact, most of this is outside of my knowledge however I'm doing my best to learn by reading Andy F's book. So this is where i'm at.
The guy doing the machine work certainly has his opinions on combinations. I'm not a technical person so I may mess some of this up. But at the end of the day, he said he would order and balance whatever combination I want, but he suggests this build as he's done them many times before and has a compression worked out to 10:3:1 with the forged flat top Mahle Pistons. He said that these pistons are designed to sit at .020 below deck which combined with a .040 gasket and an 88 CC or larger head will put me at that that compression ratio.
Now I argued that having pistons not at zero deck, and using a larger gasket would effect quench. In which case I was told again, that he will balance whatever combination I want, but said that quench isn't as big as a factor on the BB Mopar as they're not designed to leverage that as much as a high performance Chevy engine etc. He mentioned that he hears people bring it up all the time, but just does not believe in his experience it makes a giant difference. (I know from reading Chyco's posts that he would disagree)
Now after doing some research, I see both sides of that argument with very little dyno testing to show actual results (which I guess that would be hard to do?). However I'm inclined to build it in a way that gives me the most power for the money. even if I get a 1/2 HP more by leveraging the effects of quench then I'd like to do it.
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SO after talking to Hughes engine's when pricing heads and CNC work he mentioned ICON 613 pistons, with a 75CC Head would make 10:3:1 compression. (forgot gasket size, or piston deck height, don't know if he mentioned that)
Hughes agreed that a flat top piston would be tough to dial it in. He said the best I can get is 11:1 with a CNCed head to 89CC.
All very confusing. Sorry to rant. I just don't know enough to decide what to do. I have a builder who's made engine's his whole life, and has made many top performing engines for street and strip (trusted by lots in the area). And I'm somebody who's never even taken apart an engine before up until a few months ago, and had to buy a book to walk me through it step by step haha. So i'm not really in a place to argue too much, and do it convincingly, but do want to pick the right combination. Again, he is open to doing whatever I want, he's just making this as a suggestion.