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Had my '57 210 on the chassis dyno today

1.2K views 37 replies 16 participants last post by  Bitchin'57  
Wow is right, that is a great looking 57 with the numbers to back it up. Don't know what you did to build up your engine, but it rocked some good numbers, plus you lose HP on a chassis dyno, plus thu the auto trans, do you run it through the mufflers on the dyno or use cutouts? I have a 95 vette that I rebuilt with stroker crank (383) ported stock lt-1 heads with better valves, 1.6 roller rockers, CompCam, forged pistons and capscrew rods, new optispark, bigger injectors. Ran terrible until I took it to dyno tune. First session was good, but only up to around 4800 rpm, not enough fuel pump. Went home and upgraded pump, came back and he finished the tune, runs fine when driving in cruise mode and turns into a beast when driven hard. Dynotune worth the bucks esp. on injected and computer controlled stuff.
 
Very impressive, hope he’s not addicted to the RPM, I confess when younger I street raced a 12.7 :1 solid roller small block, turned regularly to 7200 to 7400. Went thru copious amounts of money, valve springs, drivetrain pieces , clutches, etc. I thought winning with a small block I was beating most comers the was achieving something, dumb, took me awhile to sort that out. Currently running tamer engines that peak at a much more longevity friendly 6k. RPM is the enemy of longevity. Feels great sounds great but expensive in the long run.