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tj300 wrote:Any one expecting a big horse power gain with a few performance bolt ons is in for a big disappointment, especially with an automatic transmission behind it. On my 300 I have the Offy DP intake, 500cfm 4bbl. carb, dual outlet header, true duals, and an MSD ignition upgrade. Originally, my engines output was 117hp, and I think about 223 ft.lbs. of torque. I would estimate, with the performance upgrades, my power output to be only nearly equal to that of a stock EFI 300. I did notice a pretty decent power gain on the freeway. But in town the gain is hardly noticable. There's nothing wrong with the engine. It runs very good and only has 76k original. Gas mileage remained the same, terrible as ever. These engines are notorious for bad mileage. And the carbed engines are noisy. I like the engine for it's reliability and ease of maintainence. I've read some posts where people spoke of plans to build their 300s to an output of 300hp. I hope you have a big bank account. You can get more performance out of a V8 with less money. A hardshift kit and a stall convertor just above stock may help some, but then there's the issue of a 3:14 gear ratio. Translates to more big money. Anyone have a 351w of equal condition they'd like to trade?
1.) Yeah, it seems to be tuned ok.American Thunder wrote:tj300 wrote:Any one expecting a big horse power gain with a few performance bolt ons is in for a big disappointment, especially with an automatic transmission behind it. On my 300 I have the Offy DP intake, 500cfm 4bbl. carb, dual outlet header, true duals, and an MSD ignition upgrade. Originally, my engines output was 117hp, and I think about 223 ft.lbs. of torque. I would estimate, with the performance upgrades, my power output to be only nearly equal to that of a stock EFI 300. I did notice a pretty decent power gain on the freeway. But in town the gain is hardly noticable. There's nothing wrong with the engine. It runs very good and only has 76k original. Gas mileage remained the same, terrible as ever. These engines are notorious for bad mileage. And the carbed engines are noisy. I like the engine for it's reliability and ease of maintainence. I've read some posts where people spoke of plans to build their 300s to an output of 300hp. I hope you have a big bank account. You can get more performance out of a V8 with less money. A hardshift kit and a stall convertor just above stock may help some, but then there's the issue of a 3:14 gear ratio. Translates to more big money. Anyone have a 351w of equal condition they'd like to trade?
I took the 302/C6 out of my bronco, rebuilt a stock '95 300, a 5-speed trans, and and bolted it all in. With a '72 intake and carb, points distributor, stock 3.55 gears, my Bronco averages 22 mpg, and has for the last 10 months or so. With the previous 302, msd ignition and all that stuff, it was averaging about 10 mpg. The 300 pulls a trailer up hills better than the 302, and when cruising empty, the bronco will maintain its speed on hills in overdrive. I also spent quite a while adjusting the fuel and ignition curves, by taking apart the carb and distributor several times.
If your 300 runs weak, I'd suggest tuning it.
Also, I wouldnt use the 500 2bbl, I would use a 390 4bbl for better fuel mileage.
As for V8s making power, yeah, they do, my 302 makes over 500 hp, and will rev to 8500 rpm(with a very substantial monetary investment) but even in the Mustang that only weighs 2450 lbs, it gets 13 mpg highway and 1 or 2 mpg town driving. And even the built 302 can't touch the 300 in torque where it counts in a truck.1.)If you need a LOT more power than the 300 is making, and you're positive it's tuned perfectly,Mileage won't be much different between the sbf and bbf, unless you're in the throttle a lot, and a 460 will rip a 351 to pieces.2.) then I'd suggest investing in a 460, not a 351.

American Thunder wrote:..... I also spent quite a while adjusting the fuel and ignition curves, by taking apart the carb and distributor several times.
If your 300 runs weak, I'd suggest tuning it.....

1.)I'm certainly up for it if I can come across someone who'd be willing to swap it out for a 300,( of equal condition).willowbilly3 wrote:1.)I agre, if you are going V8 why put a thirsty 351 when you can have a 460 with about the same fuel consumption.
I have found that 300s don't like to be crowded. In stock form I have noticed mileage with drop off a lot by just pushing from 55 to 65.2.)If your 300 is getting crappy milage then their is either something wrong with the set up or something wrong with your driving habits.3.) I'll trade you a good 351 for your 300, if you leave all the goodies on it.

1.)Actually, that's about what I'm getting. Seems like I'm looking at mileage differently.Harte3 wrote:1.)I've gotten 18.5 at 60-62...17.3 pushing and holding 70-72 on a 800+ mile trip to the coast and back...18.4 on a trip down to Riggins, ID and back with two big climbs to make...Whitebird and Lewiston Hill with a total of about 15 miles of 7% grade. Around town on cold starts and short trips about 14. No problem plugging around on 30 mph streets at 900-1000 rpm and getting a smooth and quick acceleration when going aggressive.
If you are running a 500 cfm 4v it's an Edelbrock? Should be no problem at all when it's dialed in. Could it be the secondary air flap might stand some "tightening" to delay the opening a bit say to about 2000-2500 rpm?2.) Otherwise you may be getting a bit of bog when mashing the gas at low engine speed.

Yeah, maybe you guys are right.Lazy JW wrote:American Thunder wrote:..... I also spent quite a while adjusting the fuel and ignition curves, by taking apart the carb and distributor several times.
If your 300 runs weak, I'd suggest tuning it.....Yup, methinks the original poster has a bit of tuning to do.
From your description it sounds like my 81 F-150 could stand a bit of tuning in the fuel/ignition curves (I haven't even touched them). It has only averaged 19+ mpg over the last 46,000 miles. I thought that was pretty good but your Bronco has me beat. Keep up the good work![]()
Joe


1.)I guess that could describe mine to a point, only yours is pulling better than mine, once I get on the freeway it moves pretty good.Harte3 wrote:1.)Mine pulls a bit soft...I wouldn't call it a bog...from low speed...1000 rpm in high gear when mashing the gas but picks right up and pulls hard once it gets to 2000-2500 rpm...just the nature of the beast.Mine weighs in at about 4100 with me in it...a little bit more now since I found a used Leer canopy in good+ condition this winter and installed it.2.)4700 seems a bit heavy.

1.)2WDStrangeRanger wrote:A few random questions:1.)Is this truck a 2WD or a 4WD?2.) Regular or extended cab?My 96 2WD RC/SB with an E4OD is only about 4100# and it has 16 years worth of smog and safety upgrades vs. your 80.3.)4700# is way too heavy for a 2WD regular cab short box.I've never come across that one before.4.)Are you sure about a 3.14 axle ratio?5.) What axle is it?6.) What tires are you running?It has a real effect on both performance and economy.7.) At what pressure are they set?8.)What do your plugs look like? Black?Grey?
Aluminum flecked?
Tan?
9.)Have you checked for vacuum leaks?10.)Is the vacuum advance in your dizzy working properly?11.)What is your total advance and at what RPM do you get there?12.)Do your secondaries remain closed until you intend for them to open? Do they open fully when you open the throttle?

1.)Except for hedders, exhaust, and MSD ignition, it's stock.80broncoman wrote:look at it this way the runner divider takes up space in the plenum and runners. this make the runners half the size till the secondays open up. they will open faster on ta 390 CFM carb. They were made for 390 Cfm carbs and good MPG. If you want performance in the 2500 and up rpm you need a 25000 and up intake.1.)That DP intake is for a stock like build.2.) Have you done anything to increase the compression and or head flow?
If not do not expect gains over what you have.

I went out and checked. It's missing.StrangeRanger wrote:Is there still a vehicle ID plate on your door jamb?
If so what is the axle code from it?

Any other way to tell? The ride in my truck feels a little low for a 3.00 ratio.StrangeRanger wrote:Nope. That's the price in British Pounds Sterling.9" ratios are typically 3.00, 3.25, 3.50 etc. not 3.14. I think you're reading some other line besides ratio off the tag

Okay. Thanks.StrangeRanger wrote:If you have an open diff:
Jack up (1) rear wheel leave the other grounded
Put the tranny in neutral
Make a chalk mark on the driveshaft where you can easily see it.
Turn the rear wheel that is in the air through (2) complete rotations
Count the rotations of the driveshaft.
The number of rotations is the ratio e.g. 3-1/4 rotations of the shaft is a 3.25:1 ratio.
If you try the above and the wheel in the air will not turn you have a limited slip diff, in which case:
Jack up the rear end with both wheels off the ground.
Put the tranny in neutral
Make a chalk mark on the driveshaft where you can easily see it.
Turn the rear wheels through (1) complete rotation.
Count the rotations of the driveshaft.
The number of rotations is the ratio e.g. 3-1/4 rotations of the shaft is a 3.25:1 ratio.

300's make good truck motors....not race motorsStrangeRanger wrote:Nope. That's the price in British Pounds Sterling.
9" ratios are typically 3.00, 3.25, 3.50 etc. not 3.14. I think you're reading some other line besides ratio off the tag
StrangeRanger wrote:I once had a 72 GMC with a 307 and a 3 on the tree regular cab 8' bed and power nothing. It weighed in at 3650 IIRC. 4700 is practically F250 territory in a 1980.
300's make good truck motors....not race motorsOh yeah, that's part of my discouragement with this engine.Harte3 wrote:Sounds like two things are working against you...the auto tranny and a tall geared rear end.

1.)2"82F100 wrote:1.)Another thought .. How big are your duals?2.) I would also agree with having the distributor recurved,3.) BTW where is the timing set?

Fair enough. As soon as the rain clears out of here I'll check it out.StrangeRanger wrote:It is not a sluggish engine.
You are either pulling a set of "economy" gears or there is something seriously wrong with your tuneup.
Please check the gear ratio so we can eliminate or confirm that as the source of the problem.

300's make good truck motors....not race motorsHere's my question, Wouldn't I lose some bottom end power?82F100 wrote:FYI I had an 82' with a 300 & C-6 Mac headers and 3.55's, Truck ran a best of 17.68 at about 82mph and that was with about 120k on the odometer.As far as timing I've run as much as 15deg when I was racing quite a bit.
You might also consider the Chevy rocker arm swap to help a lil bit if you still have the stock cam in it( kinda like a cheap RV Cam).

1.) I am running the timing at stock specks. I would have to say that my engine is basically stock. Here's what I have, Offy DP intake, Edelbrocks Performer 500cfm 4bbl., dual outlet Hedman hedders, true dual 2" exhuast exiting at the rear bumper, high flow turbo style mufflers, no cats, MSD 6a box, MSD Super Conductor wires, MSD Blaster coil. As far as headwork, cam, and any internals the engine is bone stock.80broncoman wrote:1.)Are you running the ignition timeing at the stock specs? If so remember stock specs are for a stock engine and vehicle.2.) run as much timing as you can for the octane of fuel you are going to run whith any pinging.[/quote}

tj300 wrote:...I've used high test gas in the truck ever since I owned it. It does not like 87. It chatters and runs hot on 87.
300's make good truck motors....not race motorsguess i will tell my grandpa that there is no way that he can make power with a 300, o he only ran 10.70's with a 300 ci straight 6 thats in the 1/4 miletj300 wrote:Any one expecting a big horse power gain with a few performance bolt ons is in for a big disappointment, especially with an automatic transmission behind it. On my 300 I have the Offy DP intake, 500cfm 4bbl. carb, dual outlet header, true duals, and an MSD ignition upgrade. Originally, my engines output was 117hp, and I think about 223 ft.lbs. of torque. I would estimate, with the performance upgrades, my power output to be only nearly equal to that of a stock EFI 300. I did notice a pretty decent power gain on the freeway. But in town the gain is hardly noticable. There's nothing wrong with the engine. It runs very good and only has 76k original. Gas mileage remained the same, terrible as ever. These engines are notorious for bad mileage. And the carbed engines are noisy. I like the engine for it's reliability and ease of maintainence. I've read some posts where people spoke of plans to build their 300s to an output of 300hp. I hope you have a big bank account. You can get more performance out of a V8 with less money. A hardshift kit and a stall convertor just above stock may help some, but then there's the issue of a 3:14 gear ratio. Translates to more big money. Anyone have a 351w of equal condition they'd like to trade?
john-dickjr wrote:guess i will tell my grandpa that there is no way that he can make power with a 300, o he only ran 10.70's with a 300 ci straight 6 thats in the 1/4 miletj300 wrote:Any one expecting a big horse power gain with a few performance bolt ons is in for a big disappointment, especially with an automatic transmission behind it. On my 300 I have the Offy DP intake, 500cfm 4bbl. carb, dual outlet header, true duals, and an MSD ignition upgrade. Originally, my engines output was 117hp, and I think about 223 ft.lbs. of torque. I would estimate, with the performance upgrades, my power output to be only nearly equal to that of a stock EFI 300. I did notice a pretty decent power gain on the freeway. But in town the gain is hardly noticable. There's nothing wrong with the engine. It runs very good and only has 76k original. Gas mileage remained the same, terrible as ever. These engines are notorious for bad mileage. And the carbed engines are noisy. I like the engine for it's reliability and ease of maintainence. I've read some posts where people spoke of plans to build their 300s to an output of 300hp. I hope you have a big bank account. You can get more performance out of a V8 with less money. A hardshift kit and a stall convertor just above stock may help some, but then there's the issue of a 3:14 gear ratio. Translates to more big money. Anyone have a 351w of equal condition they'd like to trade?
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