jedhead
New Member
Stage II cams and bolt-ons, such as EH intake, BBB, 80mm MAF, LPM, y-pipe, and cat-back on an other wise stock engine in good condition will get you close to 300 SAE net hp at the crankshaft (Vadim shown me dynojet sheets showing 246hp FWHP, couple that with a 15 to 17% percent loss in the driveline would be about 289-296hp at the crankshaft). To get to the 300 or more hp you would need to raise the compression with higher compression pistons or shave the heads (pistons have the advantage that you can obtain pistons that are lighter and stronger than stock thus lowering the mass of the rotating parts). Bore the engine out or start with 3.62" bore (3.2 liters). Add ported and polished heads and you can be at the 300hp mark (Vadim showed me a dynojet sheet with 256hp at the wheels which translate to 301-308hp)Rio:
how the **** is that "internally stock"... shrug dohjedhead:
You can get close to 300hp at the crank on an interally stock 3.0 motor. Port and polish the heads, high compression JE pistons, EH the intake, add stage 2 cams, 80mm MAF, LPM, Y-pipe and a cat-back you would be pretty close to 300hp mark. Add adjustable sprockets, and some time on FORD's supercomputer that has the SHO motor model to get the best cam timing and you may exceed the 300hp.
Bob
I thought the 3.2 liter should have made a little more hp, but engines seem to vary in how they perform. It could be that the 3.0 had an aluminum flywheel (lower rotating mass thus more hp) and 3.2 had a quaife and a stock flywheel (higher rotating mass).
I believe Ted Breaux's SHO, some time in the past, had adjustable cam sprockets and cams made my Logicams. Someone modeled his engine with the custom cams on Ford's engine model and came up with the best cam timing. His SHO was one of the most powerful SHO around for a while.
Bob
<small>[ June 17, 2003, 01:32 AM: Message edited by: jedhead ]</small>