Ok awesome! Yes, I made sure I had enough slack in the wires to swing the dizzy either way a few inches
It hasn't gone yet. Waiting to hear back from them with my appointment. Frustrating as I want to drop ot in and drive my car.
With the porting done to the head, I'm guessing it should be pretty close to 600 TQ, probably 570-580 (could be wrong on that one) and 530-540 HP
I haven't heard back from one dyno shop yet so I spoke with another today. He's checking to see if his Pontiac plate will bolt up to the Buick crank so his dyno can work. Does anyone know if that is possible? He also mentioned he's a few weeks out until he can do it. Common thing these days but I'm anxious to drive my car again.
Trust me I have considered that but I really want to break in and tune the engine on an engine dyno that way if anything goes wrong it's easier to make repairs/adjustments. There's tons of chassis dynos around me but shops with engine dynos are very limited.
That's what he and I were thinking too, that the Pontiac plate should bolt up to the Buick crank flange.
I think you would want to use your flex plate, you had the assembly balanced with it..........putting a flex plate from another manufacturer even if it bolted up could mess that up. Now if his plate bolts on to where the torque converter does you should be fine......that would mean his dyno drive plate is neutral and you still use your flywheel/flex plate
Hey Ben, yes I wanted to but he said his dyno won't mount to it. I borrowed a stock 70 Buick manual trans flywheel to bolt up to the engine and his dyno will work on that.
Exciting!!! I’m a few hours of work away from dyno testing as well so it’s very cool. Of course it may be a while till we actually go to the dyno as he keeps finding more power in the heads with porting.
He has 3 of my engines complete. One is a stock 70 315 HP, next is a 10:1 girdled, billet crank 355 for turbos with alum heads, and a 13:1 355 race NA setup