Slowly rebuilding car I currently have a 454 4 bolt that's outtake a 76 tow truck that was running on propane....a friend wants this motor and has a complete running 427dilemma?
Slowly rebuilding car I currently have a 454 4 bolt that's outtake a 76 tow truck that was running on propane....a friend wants this motor and has a complete running 427dilemma?
Is the 427 a true 427 according to the casting #'s? Some people take a 454 block, put in a 396 crank and call it a 427 (because that's what it's now displacing). But the casting #'s will always show it as a 454, not a 427.
For nostalgia sake and a few bucks more per hp, a 427 is your choice.
For raw hp and tire shredding torque its a 454.
My 454 build is fresh off a dyno break-in. 557 ft.lb @ 3200 rpm, 449 hp @ 5000 rpm.
More or less a budget build with some thump to it for my 72 Nova. I had a 454 in the shed with most of the peripherals in hand so 454 was a no brainer for me, but to be honest I never considered going 427.
As others said, you have to check casting numbers to see what actual options you have.
-- Edited by Mike Ward MB on Saturday 3rd of November 2018 10:28:29 PM
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72 Nova SS, 66 Beaumont Sport Deluxe, 09 Pontiac Solstice GXP Coupe
Slowly rebuilding car I currently have a 454 4 bolt that's outtake a 76 tow truck that was running on propane....a friend wants this motor and has a complete running 427dilemma?
The fact that your friend wants the 454 and is offering a running 427 should tell you something right there. Nonetheless a 427 is more in keeping with your car and era.