" From: Tom Jennings <tomj@xxxxxxx> " " Sandwich Maker wrote: " " > their pins are much smaller than the 199's, 0.860" vs. 0.930", but the " > 327 and even the '55 252 six - though oddly not earlier 252s/234s/etc " > - are the same size. " " > 6.825" is only 0.700" longer than the 199 / '70s 232 / 4.0 6.125" rod. " > you could just barely handle it on a 199 crank in a '71-up tall deck " > block; by my calc a 1.15" pin height, and that's just about the " > minimum i've seen on any aftermkt american slugs. i'm not so sure " > you could make it work in a '64-'70 block. " > " > if the 327 rods had a usable big end, you could just about drop them " > in and run stock slugs on them, with a 199 crank in a 4.0 block. " " I'm at work and don't have any printed data; but 195.6 L-head pistons " (flat topped...) have 1.75" pin height, clearly live happily on the ends " of those long rods, and the big end attaches to a 199 crank... too bad " it's only 3.125" across. So close, yet so far away... i think they'd be about 0.600" out the deck of a [heavily sleeved] 4.0 block at tdc! you'd need custom slugs with a 0.90" pin height [if that's possible] in order to run 196 rods in the navarro block. it might actually be advantageous to have them made for the smaller 196 wristpins. ________________________________________________________________________ Andrew Hay the genius nature internet rambler is to see what all have seen adh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and think what none thought _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list