A
Anonymous
Guest
OK gang. The block (1968 200ci) is coming out tomorrow and heading the machine shop. They are going to hot tank it, clean it up and flux it to make sure she's goot to rebuild. Assuming it is, i have some questions about how much to bore over, deck it if at all, and how much to mill the head.
I'm replacing the '69 head on her with a rebuilt head from a '77 (hardened seats, larger valves, etc). My I6 bible says to deck this head .060 to make up for the newer thicker gaskets. Makes perfect sense to me. This should keep me close to stock compression if I was just swapping heads. However, this block is going to be build from the ground up with FordSixParts peformance goods! Full roller rockers, hydraulic cam, lifters, push rods, a cam with a little more excitment to it, forged pistons, all new bearings, ARP bolts, high-po dampner, headers, + 2V carb + adapter. So yo see, I'm not looking to go back to stock. I want to make this little 6 sream. I'm no looking for stock compression ratios.
SO, question number 1:
the handbook also says it's better to deck the block instead of milling the head where possible. I understand the why's of this and what it means, but are they suggesting to deck the head .060 INSTEAD of the head if possible? Could I just split the differnce and do .030 on each (assuming i have .030 deck height now). Does anyone know what the "stock" deck height on a '68 200 would be?
Will replacement pistons (same rods and crank) change the deck height just by bolting them in or can I use an existing piston setup to get my current deck height? The pistons are already out, but I can easily pop one back in for measurements. BUT if new pistons will produce different deck heights, I'll have to wait to have them new pistons in hand to measure the new deck height to know how much I can remove...right? That'll put a real squeeze on things as the pistons take 3-4 weeks to make!
Here is what I'M thinking would be a good plan...please tell me if this makes sense!
have the head milled .060 to make up the gasket difference
Have the block cleaned up then have it bored and honed just enough to perfect the cylinders but not less that .020
Once that's done measure my volume (liquid filling the cylinder and combustion chamber) as a base reference for my new compression ration (new head and newly bored cylinders).
From that point decide how much to deck the block to reach a goal compression ratio. Assuming I have that much block surface to mill, take that amount off. If I don't have enough deck height to cut, can I take the difference off the head over and above the already .060 milling it had?
ex: my existing deck height is .040 and my target compression ratio requires I lose .060 more material from somewhere. Can I take the .040 off the deck bringing me to 0 deck height and then take the remaining .020 off the head (noting it's already had .060 milled)?
So, with all of that said, what is a good target compression ratio for me? This 200 is in a '63 Falcon Convertible with the standard 2-speed tranny (WILL be a C4 soon enough) and stock rear end (I think).
Thanks tons to all for all of the help!! You guys rock!
I'm replacing the '69 head on her with a rebuilt head from a '77 (hardened seats, larger valves, etc). My I6 bible says to deck this head .060 to make up for the newer thicker gaskets. Makes perfect sense to me. This should keep me close to stock compression if I was just swapping heads. However, this block is going to be build from the ground up with FordSixParts peformance goods! Full roller rockers, hydraulic cam, lifters, push rods, a cam with a little more excitment to it, forged pistons, all new bearings, ARP bolts, high-po dampner, headers, + 2V carb + adapter. So yo see, I'm not looking to go back to stock. I want to make this little 6 sream. I'm no looking for stock compression ratios.
SO, question number 1:
the handbook also says it's better to deck the block instead of milling the head where possible. I understand the why's of this and what it means, but are they suggesting to deck the head .060 INSTEAD of the head if possible? Could I just split the differnce and do .030 on each (assuming i have .030 deck height now). Does anyone know what the "stock" deck height on a '68 200 would be?
Will replacement pistons (same rods and crank) change the deck height just by bolting them in or can I use an existing piston setup to get my current deck height? The pistons are already out, but I can easily pop one back in for measurements. BUT if new pistons will produce different deck heights, I'll have to wait to have them new pistons in hand to measure the new deck height to know how much I can remove...right? That'll put a real squeeze on things as the pistons take 3-4 weeks to make!
Here is what I'M thinking would be a good plan...please tell me if this makes sense!
have the head milled .060 to make up the gasket difference
Have the block cleaned up then have it bored and honed just enough to perfect the cylinders but not less that .020
Once that's done measure my volume (liquid filling the cylinder and combustion chamber) as a base reference for my new compression ration (new head and newly bored cylinders).
From that point decide how much to deck the block to reach a goal compression ratio. Assuming I have that much block surface to mill, take that amount off. If I don't have enough deck height to cut, can I take the difference off the head over and above the already .060 milling it had?
ex: my existing deck height is .040 and my target compression ratio requires I lose .060 more material from somewhere. Can I take the .040 off the deck bringing me to 0 deck height and then take the remaining .020 off the head (noting it's already had .060 milled)?
So, with all of that said, what is a good target compression ratio for me? This 200 is in a '63 Falcon Convertible with the standard 2-speed tranny (WILL be a C4 soon enough) and stock rear end (I think).
Thanks tons to all for all of the help!! You guys rock!