> I'd love to do something to a 196 OHV, and turbo does seem to be the way. Besides head/block sealing issues, the intake side is so poor that I think the thing to do is simply leave stock valve sizes and simply boost it. I doubt that massive port and valve work would get you what another 2 psi of boost would get, cheaper and faster. Plus the stroke is so long it simply takes a long time to fill a cylinder. Stock, the whole motor pumps 212 cfm at 5000 rpm! I assume 75% volumetric efficiency for that calc, which is probably about right or maybe optimistic! A suck-through turbo with a Weber or Holley 390 would be simplest. Would the very low volume of the cast-in-head manifold help with lag issues? With backfire explosion side effects? There's the issue of no cams available, apparently not even stock-replacements! Frank had one re-ground, but almost certainly a turbo just wins all around. Dick Datson makes some arguments that the 195.6 OHV has a massively strong bottom end, hence would take a lot of boost, but who knows. It's at least not inherently weak, other than only 4 mains. But even double torque isn't THAT much force. Doubling the cylinder charge somewhere in the rpm range of 2000 - 4500 would be a huge, huge improvement, if you could keep the head sealed! > Another issue I'm curious about is oiling; Besides the oil filter/full > flow vs partial flow difference between the '65 and those in prior years, > are there any differences in the pump itself? Are there any oiling > issues that could be addressed as part of a quality rebuild (like on the > 290-401s)? I think Frank said that the pump body itself is different, eg. the partial vs. full flow... but it allegedly bolts on, but will not fit in a pre-64 American. It MAY fit, apparently, with a remote oil filter adapter. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list