News:

Classified ads are not allowed on the forum.

Main Menu

302 Compression Ratio

Started by TooManyReels, March 15, 2011, 07:28:36 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

TooManyReels

What was the factory compression ratio on a 1969 302, 10:01 or 11:01?
TMR
Eddie
63 Chevy II SS 570hp 560tq.
69 Z28 X33 Cross Ram JL8

bertfam


TooManyReels

Thank you...That would have been my guess, but I was just not sure...
TMR...
Eddie
63 Chevy II SS 570hp 560tq.
69 Z28 X33 Cross Ram JL8

william

At the risk of sounding "techie" advertised compression in those days was the optimum possible number. All parts vary and the actual compression ratio could be lower; 10.0:1 or 10.5:1. Deck height and compressed head gasket thickness affect it. The standard speed shop "bluprint" included decking the block to reach the advertised ratio. Standard rebuild practices such as boring cylinders or a valve job can reduce the ratio.
Learning more and more about less and less...

TooManyReels

So is Cam 2 fuel or higher octane required for these motors if driven on the street today..If so, that going to be an expensive ride,,,

TMR
Eddie
63 Chevy II SS 570hp 560tq.
69 Z28 X33 Cross Ram JL8

RAfbody

That would depend on your cam choice.  Advertised and dynamic compression are totally different.
Russ

JohnZ

Quote from: TooManyReels on March 16, 2011, 08:05:47 PM
So is Cam 2 fuel or higher octane required for these motors if driven on the street today..If so, that going to be an expensive ride,,,

TMR

With the stock "30-30" cam, no; its late-closing intake valve bleeds off some cylinder pressure, reducing the DCR somewhat, and any stock 11:1 302 that won't run properly on pump premium simply isn't tuned properly. Aftermarket cams always close the intake valve sooner in the never-ending quest for more power, and all bets are off with aftermarket cams.
'69 Z/28
Fathom Green
CRG