b-body-bob
Well-known member
I've got my eye on a "built" 318, I mean 5.2 Magnum now. There's nothing wrong with that, right? Supposed to have been balanced, blueprinted, and dynoed @ 397 HP but never used.
Nah the seller told me the guy had found a shipper.It doesn't look like you're out of the running just yet, Robert. Fastenal won't ship it.
I'm just thinking it's not going to be easy to find a 360 is all.I don't know that I'd bother with a 318 unless you've got something very specific planned around that displacement. You'd get so much more return on investment with a 360 (far less so with a Magnum, of course).
What's to like?Why the Magnum hate?![]()
You & B-body-babe should road-trip that Dakota up this way over the summer. Bring a trailer. We'll ship you home with however many 360s you can swing (or fit) @ $300/pop, complete, with transmissions. You should be able to profit nicely if they're that rare in the eastern US. Everywhere else, they nearly grow on trees. I've given away a couple in the past few years, as has Stretch.I'm just thinking it's not going to be easy to find a 360 is all.
Upper Michigan. My brother made numersious visits to Virginia when his kids lived there in a similar-year F-150 with a V6. He never had a problem. Did I ever tell you about the time I moved home from PA in a '72 Charger that had been sitting for decades? I moved one week after swappinng the windshield, rear axle, and front suspension, rigging up some exhaust, and getting the 318 running. I did all of that in a clearing in the woods, hurriedly. It didn't knock, so I ran it.Where is "up this way", Saskatchewan or Vancouver?
For all the vehicles that got turned in for that shit--which is far less than people believe--I'll bet very few were powered by 360 LA engines. That program was a failure overall. Chrysler cast several million of them, you know.I've got two words for you on why an LA 360 is hard to find - Cash 4 Clunkers
I would bet his plan was to buy that engine just for the top end, then he figured out he's not really saving much, if any, money by going that route.Now the other guy's shipper has fallen through. I think he's just yanking the seller's chain because at the same time this is going on he's got a thread running talking about building a stroked 360.
Machine shops have been closing at a breakneck pace in the last 15-20 years largely thanks to factory crate engines, so chances are it won't be there too long. They're going to want to get it done and get that money in the account. Don't pay ahead; I made that mistake and not only my block was gone for 18 months, they actually seemed surprised that I showed up on the exact day and time I told them I would.Now if things turn out as I expect, I won't be able to get the 360 out of the machine shop for a year.
I'm pretty sure those places don't work like bodyshops, but you never know.
It's still a pretty reasonable deal if once could retrieve it, based on throwing the 397 number out and just accepting what it is. Methinks that once shipping is involved it starts to get borderline. I did notice it's .060" over, which might be OK with a 318 block, and that it's got hypereutectic pistons. Personal preference would have those pistons out and gone pretty quickly, with a sonic check of the bores while they're open.And of course the 318's available today.
I had to ask where a machine shop was around here. They used to be all over the place, we even had guys that worked as machinists in the factories with home operations set up. Not any more.Machine shops have been closing at a breakneck pace in the last 15-20 years largely thanks to factory crate engines, so chances are it won't be there too long. They're going to want to get it done and get that money in the account. Don't pay ahead; I made that mistake and not only my block was gone for 18 months, they actually seemed surprised that I showed up on the exact day and time I told them I would.
Yeah there were too many questions on that motor that kept me from just saying drop that other guy, I've got cash and I'm ready.It's still a pretty reasonable deal if once could retrieve it, based on throwing the 397 number out and just accepting what it is. Methinks that once shipping is involved it starts to get borderline. I did notice it's .060" over, which might be OK with a 318 block, and that it's got hypereutectic pistons. Personal preference would have those pistons out and gone pretty quickly, with a sonic check of the bores while they're open.