[DeTomaso] Budget 351C Rebuild for Lori Drew

Daniel C Jones daniel.c.jones2 at gmail.com
Tue Aug 11 12:43:47 EDT 2015


Rather than hammering the list with all the pictures, I posted the pictures
(and text) to the 351C forum here:

 http://www.the351cforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=656

and just the text with links to the pictures below.

Dan Jones

Dave McLain recently rebuilt and dynoed a 351C for Lori Drew's Pantera.
Lori's Pantera is a 1971 model with 95K miles on the odometer but the
engine was leaking and burning oil and detonated badly under acceleration.
At a PCNC tech session, a valve cover was removed and the engine started
briefly to discover one of the rocker arms was barely moving, a clear sign
a lobe had worn off the cam.  Dave had previously built a 408C for Mike
Drew's Pantera that Mike was very happy with so the decision was made to
pull the engine, crate it up and ship it to Dave for a rebuild.  Mike
reused the crate and steel engine cradle that Dave had made to ship Mike's
408C.  Along with the engine, Mike had collected a bunch of parts over the
years that he packed in the crate.  All totaled, the shipping crate weighed
nearly 850 lbs.

Mike and Lori's instructions were to perform a basic rebuild, re-using as
many parts as possible to keep the cost down.  A generous Pantera Owners
Club member donated a set of lightly used (approximately 1000 miles) Ross
pistons on a set of stock connecting rods that were fitted with ARP rod
bolts.  The pistons are part number 80556 which are a forged flat top with
1.668" pin height, large single valve relief and 1/16", 1/16", 3/16" ring
grooves.


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Ross_Piston_polished_rods_zpsvy3nm6r4.jpg

Assuming a block deck height of 9.213" and 0.050" piston to head clearance
(block plus compressed head gasket) and closed chamber heads, the static
compression ratio should be approximately 10.4:1.  In addition to the
pistons, we'd be re-using some low mileage parts that were on the engine:

 Ford Motorsports double roller timing chain set
 Aviaid gated and baffled Pantera oil pan
 Edelbrock Performer 351C-4V aluminum dual plane intake manifold
 Holley 650 double pumper carburetor
 Ford distributor with Pertronix ignition module
 Robert Shaw thermostat
 Crane plug wires

The roller timing set is one that Mike and I picked out at Summit Racing in
Reno, NV several years ago.  We had them bring out a bunch of timing sets
and opened the boxes to check the chains.  The Ford Motorsport set used the
good Renold chain from France while many of the other boxes contained the
poor quality Rolon chain from India.  The 650 DP carb was one that Mike had
first put on his Pantera in 1989 and later moved over to his GT350 clone
Mustang.  Mike had it worked over by John Christian at Roush.  While we
might have been tempted to toss the used thermostat in the can, the high
quality Robert Shaw unit was nearly new and unfortunately the Robert Shaw
units are no longer available new.  The right thermostat is crucial in a
351C as it needs to have a shoulder that matches the restrictor ring in the
block so that the bypass port works as intended:


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/OHOnews21of38_zpsrl5zhn8v.jpg

The Cleveland thermostat is not shared with other Fords.  Using a Windsor
thermostat (which the parts counter monkeys will often try to give you)
will lead to over-heating because coolant will bypass the radiator.  The
same thing happens if you remove the thermostat.  Mike specifically
requested we use a Fel Pro 35041T thermostat gasket, instead of the typical
paper gasket, as the Fel Pro can be re-used.  FWIW, the paper ones seal
well with a light coating of Permatex Form-a-Gasket but need to scraped off
when replacing the thermostat.

After the engine was pulled, it was noticed the block did not have a serial
number stamped on the back, as DeTomaso normally did, and it was a
four-bolt-main block.  Except for the Boss 351, closed chamber headed
Clevelands generally left the factory mounted on 2 bolt main blocks which
means the block (or possibly the entire engine) was replaced somewhere in
the vehicle's past.  Disassembly and inspection revealed what appeared to
be a stock short block in good rebuildable condition.  As expected, the cam
had a flat lobe.  Dave plotted the cam and the specs (196/204 degrees @
0.050", 117 degrees lobe separation angle, installed on a 114 degrees
intake centerline) suggest it was a stock 1970 to early 1971 part.  The
heads were verified to be of the desirable closed chamber variety but did
not have the original (and failure prone) Ford valves.  The intakes checked
out and were the right 2.19" diameter for the seats but had 0.100" longer
stems.  The exhausts were 1.65" diameter.  However, all the valves had the
OEM multi-groove loose-fit keeper design and were replaced with new single
groove stainless valves from SI in the standard Cleveland length and stock
2.19"/1.71" diameters.  Hardened seats were installed and the left had side
cylinder head had 4 bolts broken off that Dave had to extract.  The stock
pedestal mount rocker arms were inspected and found to be in good condition
but are of the lugged variety:


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_stock_rockers_showing_oil_zpshtqc6y6n.jpg[/IMG]

There are two types of stock 351C rocker arms (lugged and unlugged):


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/OHOnews16of38_zpsdsyg293s.jpg[/IMG]

The ones with a lug on top have a clearance problem with cams of 0.550" or
greater lift.  The pushrod tube can contact the lower position of the
rocker arm when the valve is fully open.  Dave compared the two styles of
rockers side-by-side and there is a noticeable difference back under the
pushrod seat where the angle up from the bottom of the pivot is less steep
on the lugged style and would get closer to the pushrod.  He noted it would
really be a problem if a 3/8" diameter pushrod was used.  I offered up a
Crane rocker arm guideplate conversion kit and 1.7:1 Crane roller rockers
but it was ultimately decided to keep the lugged rockers and just limit the
lift of the cam.  In keeping with the budget rebuild theme, a hydraulic
flat tappet cam was chosen with emphasis was on low and mid-range
performance with a 6000 RPM red line, assuming 91 octane fuel.  Mike had
run a Comp 280H Magnum flat tappet cam in his Pantera's previous 351C (open
chamber 4V heads with domed pistons and Blue Thunder dual plane) and found
it pretty lazy below 3000 RPM so wanted something that worked better down
low.  The Comp 280H has 60 degrees of overlap with specs of:

 Comp 280H Magnum  280/280 degrees seat duration (230/230 @ 0.050"),
0.530"/0.530" lift, 110 LSA

So we'd likely be looking at something around 54 degrees of overlap.
Specific instructions from Mike were:

"The goal is to maximize torque in the low- and mid-range, with a 5500 RPM
power
 peak and 6000 shift point.  This engine will never see more than 6000 rpm
so
 there's no need to build it with a cam that is dead down low, and would
continue
 to build power at 6500-7000 rpm.  For simplicity and cost sake, this means
a
 traditional non-roller hydraulic cam."

I had some time to kill on a flight to Finland, so I modeled the engine in
Dynomation and ran a bunch of off-the-shelf hydraulic flat tappet camshafts
through, along with a few mild hydraulic rollers.  Some of the cams
evaluated were:

 Isky 264 Megacam..264/264..(214/214)..0.525"/0.525"..108 LSA    2000-5800
RPM
 Isky 270 Megacam..270/270..(221/221)..0.542"/0.542"..108 LSA    2000-6200
RPM
 Lunati 10320311...275/275..(225/225)..0.550"/0.550"..108 LSA    1800-5800
RPM (old p/n 07111)
 Erson E220421.....296/296..(228/228)..0.545"/0.545"..108 LSA    3000-6000
RPM
 Bullet 138268.....268/268..(218/218)..0.528"/0.528"..110 LSA    Good idle,
good street and off-road performance.
 Lunati 10320302...276/276..(221/221)..0.524"/0.524"..110 LSA    idle-5600
(identical to Ultradyne below)
 Ultradyne.........276/276..(221/221)..0.524"/0.524"..110 LSA
Performance and economy for 4WD's, pickups, and Panteras.
 Elgin E-1801P.....284/284..(222/222)..0.539"/0.539"..110 LSA
 Crower 15173......280/287..(219/225)..0.530"/0.524"..110 LSA    2300-6300,
3800 RPM peak torque, 5700 RPM peak power
 Crower 15174......289/295..(227/233)..0.555"/0.547"..110 LSA    2400-6400,
3900 RPM peak torque, 5900 RPM peak power
 Erson E220222.....284/296..(220/228)..0.545"/0.545"..110 LSA    2500-5500,
strong mid-range
 Comp Cams 270H....270/270..(224/224)..0.519"/0.519"..110 LSA
 Comp Cams 280H....280/280..(230/230)..0.530"/0.530"..110 LSA
 Bullet Custom 1...275/275..(223/223)..0.567"/0.567"..109 LSA    Bullet
HF275/328 CRA lobes (Ford lifter diameter)
 Bullet Custom 2...275/277..(223/228)..0.567"/0.580"..111 LSA    Bullet
HF275/328 and HF277/335 CRA lobes
 Reed TM276H-11....276/276..(223/223)..0.543"/0.543"..111 LSA

Many of the profiles were eliminated with the decision to stick with the
lugged rocker arms due to the maximum lift considerations.  I also
evaluated all combinations of the following Reed Torque Master lobes:

 Seat...0.050" Lift (w/1.73:1 rocker ratio)
 252....205....0.497"
 264....214....0.519"
 272....218....0.531"
 276....223....0.543"
 280....227....0.548"

Dave likes the Torque Master lobes.  They are quiet, reliable and run
well.  Since the engine won't be spun past the HP peak very often, there's
no need for the usual extra exhaust duration so a single pattern cam was
picked.  Also, on a 351C with 2.19" canted valves, I might widen the LSA to
111 degrees to reduce reversion but, with the minimal overlap, that's not
an issue so we stayed with a 109 degrees LSA.  The cam was sourced through
Steve Demos (formerly of Reed Cams) and with the smallish 650 CFM carb,
small port dual plane intake manifold and shorty Pantera headers is quite
mild:

 Demos 272H-109   272/272 (218/218) 0.531"/0.531"  109 LSA  108 ICL

Valve springs are PBM/Erson 3100 set at 1.810" intake and 1.860" exhaust
for loads of 110 lbs seated, 270 lbs open intake and 93 lbs seated, 250 lbs
open exhaust.  There were no signs of valvetrain instability on the dyno up
to the 5800 RPM maximum that was run on the dyno.


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_rockers_springs_zps8kzaiusa.jpg

All the older dual plane intake manifolds we've had on the flow bench have
had good and bad runners and have benefited from plenum entry work.  Dave
did some minor work on the plenum and port exits and welded the exhaust
crossover shut:


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_Performer_plenum_zpsbtdzu2ot.jpg


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_Performer_runner_roof_zpsfmub3uot.jpg


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_Performer_runner_zpskf3l6dn0.jpg

On the dyno, the engine was tested with the restrictive Euro GTS headers
and ANSA mufflers but will get the stainless steel Wilkinson Euro GTS
replacements that performed much better in previous testing.  This shot
shows the entire Euro GTS Pantera exhaust with the mufflers rotated to
clear the dyno:


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_GTS_headers_mufflers_zpshcxahdp9.jpg

and a shot from the front showing just the headers:


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_351C_on_dyno_zpsukbzjwso.jpg

The Pantera Euro GTS Ansa muffler bodies are quite small with long tips:


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_GTS_mufflers_zpsex7zrshf.jpg

and the GTS headers are oddly sized with large 2" outer diameter but short
(16 to 22 inches typically) primaries along with a short tri-y style
collector having a small 2 1/4" ID outlet:


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_GTS_headers_zpsipaecpjs.jpg

In testing, the headers do pretty well on peak power but give up quite a
bit of peak torque (25+ ft-lbs) when compared with more conventional long
tube headers.  The mufflers are quite restrictive, costing on the order of
50 HP on 500+ HP engines.

When Dave first fired the engine, it didn't sound so hot so he pulled the
donor plug wires off and replaced them which made the engine sound much
better.  Turns out several of the wires were bad.  The cam was broken in,
rings seated and some pulls made to optimize the timing and jetting.  With
the closed chamber heads, best timing was 14 degrees initial and 36 degrees
total.  Dave ordered a 4 hole 1 inch tall spacer that he modified into a
design with two oval shaped holes to match the oval holes on the dual plane
Performer intake.


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_phenolic_spacer_zpsfafucadx.jpg

The spacer helped torque by about 5 lbs-ft but peak HP was unchanged.  The
best pull was with the GTS headers but without the ANSA mufflers:

 378 HP @ 5700 RPM
 396 ft-lbs @ 4100 RPM


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Drew%20351C%20No%20Mufflers_zpsjzywch24.jpg

With ANSA mufflers and a 1" spacer, it made:

 355 HP @ 5800 RPM
 388 ft-lbs @ 3900 RPM


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Drew%20351%20C%20With%201%20Inch%20Spacer_zps0g1rzpnj.jpg

The ANSA Euro GTS mufflers cost 23 HP and 8 ft-lbs on this combo.  The
non-GTS ANSA mufflers are even more restrictive while the Wilkinson exhaust
should be closer to the open header pull.  The engine ended up peaking at
5700 RPM with nearly 400 ft-lbs of torque so I'd say we pretty much nailed
Mike's request.  With their overly large ports, its easy to kill the bottom
end on a 351C-4V with the wrong combo (too much cam, not enough
compression, wrong intake and/or headers) but this build demonstrates that
with nothing more than a well thought selection of parts and careful
assembly, a 351C-4V can make quite respectable torque in a daily driver RPM
range.

If you were to remove the lift restriction imposed by the lugged rocker
arms and run more aggressive hydraulic flat tappet lobes, there should be
more power to be had, even with the same modest cam overlap.  I ran a cam
of the same 54 degrees overlap but using more aggressive cam lobes:

 Bullet 275/277 (223/228) 0.567"/0.580" 111 LSA

through Dynomation and, with no other changes, the simulation predicts an
additional 13 HP peaking 200 RPM higher.  The lobes might be a bit noisy,
though.  If you were to build a similar engine for a Mustang or Cougar,
previous testing of 1 3/4" long tube Mustang headers have added 25 to 30
ft-lbs of peak torque and the MPG Stinger exhaust stuffers were also worth
some peak torque.  If the intake doesn't have to fit under a stock Pantera
engine screen, I'd wager there's another 20 to 25 HP to be had with an
Edelbrock Performer RPM Air Gap high rise dual plane and, perhaps, a carb
with 50 more CFM.  For comparisons sake, here are some A/B measurements I
made of the various dual planes available for the 351C.  The measurements
represent the drop from a straight edge laid across the carb pad to the
closest point where the end rail bends inward (each end).  Measurements are
in inches:

 Intake                                    A        B
 Edelbrock F-351 Performer  4V           3 3/4     4 3/8
 Edelbrock Performer RPM Air Gap 2V      4 1/2     5 5/8
 Ford aluminum 4V                        3 1/4     4 3/8
 Scott Cook                              3 3/4     5
 Blue Thunder/Shelby/Holman Moody        4 7/16    5 3/8

Note that both the Scott Cook and Blue Thunder dual planes are the canted
pad versions but both are available with flat carb pads for Panteras that
mount the engine level.  Note that, being an air gap design, the Performer
RPM would be slower to warm up.

I'm quite interested in hearing what Lori's Pantera does for fuel economy.
If I'd thought of it at the time, Lori's engine would have been perfect to
test my ported spread bore Offenhauser Dual Port intake manifold with
Carter ThermoQuad.  The vacuum advance unit on the Ford distributor was
blown so Dave replaced it with a single diaphragm style that is adjustable
and measured how much each turn of the adjustment changes the total:


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_351C_vacuum_advance_zpsldclegoc.jpg

Dave connected it to the ported vacuum source so it is not active at idle
and one turn on the adjustment equals 5 degrees change in the amount of
timing it can add to the engine under light load conditions.  There's one
turn of adjustment "into" the pod so it gives the engine five degrees more
when its at part throttle above idle.  In the Pantera, with the center
bulkhead cover removed, there is access to the front of the engine so Mike
and Lori can adjust it from there for best cruise fuel economy.  Here's a
link to a video of Dave messing with the carburetor/idle settings and the
vacuum advance:


https://onedrive.live.com/redir?resid=a9d064308c1f92bf!87848&authkey=!AGb4h-XRCGW9F1Y&ithint=video%2cmp4

Overall, the engine parts list looks like:

 Holley model 4777 650 CFM double pumper carburetor with added electric
choke
 Edelbrock Performer 351C-4V aluminum intake manifold (with port and plenum
work by Dave McLain)
 Closed chamber 4V Cleveland heads
  Valve job, hard exhaust seats and resurfaced, machined for Viton seals
intake and exhaust
  SI stainless valves in stock 2.19"/1.71" sizes
  PBM/Erson 502S retainers
  PBM/Erson 3100 valve springs set at 1.810" intake and 1.860" exhaust for
loads of
   110 lbs seated, 270 lbs open intake
   93 lbs seated, 250 lbs open exhaust
 Ford Motorsport aluminum valve covers with baffles that are welded in
place to keep oil off of PCV and breather
 351C block bored to 4.020 bore size (with 3.5" stroke = 355 cubic inches
displacement)
 Ross flat top forged pistons
 Ross forged flat top pistons, part number 80556, single large valve
relief, 1.668" pin height
 Mahle 1/16", 1/16" 3/16" standard tension ring set
 Ford 351C connecting rods, polished, shot peened, ARP bolts
 King rod and main bearings, 0.002", 0.0028" clearances
 Ford 351C crank, polished, rotating assembly balanced
 New Power Bond damper
 Stock timing pointer corrected
 Engine Tech gasket set
 Ford Motorsport timing set
 Aviaid gated and baffled Pantera road race oil pan and matching pickup
 Stock volume/pressure Melling M84A oil pump
 New Melling oil pump drive shaft
 Joe Gibbs BR oil(8quarts)
 Hastings LF 115 filter
 Custom grind flat tappet hydraulic cam from Demos Cams using Reed 272H
Torque Master lobes:
   272/272 seat duration, (218/218 degrees @ 0.050"), 0.531"/0.531", 109
LSA installed on 107 degrees ICL
 Stock Ford 351C non-adjustable rockers (with oil deflectors) and pushrods
 Distributor is stock Ford with a Pertronix Ignitor kit and adjustable
vacuum advance
 Autolite 25 spark plugs gapped at 0.045"
 Edelbrock aluminum water pump

Here's a shot of the assembled long block:


http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_longblock_zpsnee2hv8f.jpg

Lori was pleased the that the total cost of the engine build, including
intake and head work and a full day of dyno tuning came in at less than
$3000.

Dan Jones
-------------- next part --------------
   Rather than hammering the list with all the pictures, I posted the
   pictures (and text) to the 351C forum here:
   A [1]http://www.the351cforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=656
   and just the text with links to the pictures below.
   Dan Jones
   Dave McLain recently rebuilt and dynoed a 351C for Lori Drew's
   Pantera.A  Lori's Pantera is a 1971 model with 95K miles on the
   odometer but the engine was leaking and burning oil and detonated badly
   under acceleration.A  At a PCNC tech session, a valve cover was removed
   and the engine started briefly to discover one of the rocker arms was
   barely moving, a clear sign a lobe had worn off the cam.A  Dave had
   previously built a 408C for Mike Drew's Pantera that Mike was very
   happy with so the decision was made to pull the engine, crate it up and
   ship it to Dave for a rebuild.A  Mike reused the crate and steel engine
   cradle that Dave had made to ship Mike's 408C.A  Along with the engine,
   Mike had collected a bunch of parts over the years that he packed in
   the crate.A  All totaled, the shipping crate weighed nearly 850 lbs.A
   Mike and Lori's instructions were to perform a basic rebuild, re-using
   as many parts as possible to keep the cost down.A  A generous Pantera
   Owners Club member donated a set of lightly used (approximately 1000
   miles) Ross pistons on a set of stock connecting rods that were fitted
   with ARP rod bolts.A  The pistons are part number 80556 which are a
   forged flat top with 1.668" pin height, large single valve relief and
   1/16", 1/16", 3/16" ring grooves.
   A [2]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleve
   land%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Ross_Piston_polished_rods_zpsvy3nm6r4.j
   pg
   Assuming a block deck height of 9.213" and 0.050" piston to head
   clearance (block plus compressed head gasket) and closed chamber heads,
   the static compression ratio should be approximately 10.4:1.A  In
   addition to the pistons, we'd be re-using some low mileage parts that
   were on the engine:
   A Ford Motorsports double roller timing chain set
   A Aviaid gated and baffled Pantera oil pan
   A Edelbrock Performer 351C-4V aluminum dual plane intake manifold
   A Holley 650 double pumper carburetor
   A Ford distributor with Pertronix ignition module
   A Robert Shaw thermostat
   A Crane plug wires
   The roller timing set is one that Mike and I picked out at Summit
   Racing in Reno, NV several years ago.A  We had them bring out a bunch
   of timing sets and opened the boxes to check the chains.A  The Ford
   Motorsport set used the good Renold chain from France while many of the
   other boxes contained the poor quality Rolon chain from India.A  The
   650 DP carb was one that Mike had first put on his Pantera in 1989 and
   later moved over to his GT350 clone Mustang.A  Mike had it worked over
   by John Christian at Roush.A  While we might have been tempted to toss
   the used thermostat in the can, the high quality Robert Shaw unit was
   nearly new and unfortunately the Robert Shaw units are no longer
   available new.A  The right thermostat is crucial in a 351C as it needs
   to have a shoulder that matches the restrictor ring in the block so
   that the bypass port works as intended:
   A [3]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleve
   land%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/OHOnews21of38_zpsrl5zhn8v.jpg
   The Cleveland thermostat is not shared with other Fords.A  Using a
   Windsor thermostat (which the parts counter monkeys will often try to
   give you) will lead to over-heating because coolant will bypass the
   radiator.A  The same thing happens if you remove the thermostat.A  Mike
   specifically requested we use a Fel Pro 35041T thermostat gasket,
   instead of the typical paper gasket, as the Fel Pro can be re-used.A
   FWIW, the paper ones seal well with a light coating of Permatex
   Form-a-Gasket but need to scraped off when replacing the thermostat.
   After the engine was pulled, it was noticed the block did not have a
   serial number stamped on the back, as DeTomaso normally did, and it was
   a four-bolt-main block.A  Except for the Boss 351, closed chamber
   headed Clevelands generally left the factory mounted on 2 bolt main
   blocks which means the block (or possibly the entire engine) was
   replaced somewhere in the vehicle's past.A  Disassembly and inspection
   revealed what appeared to be a stock short block in good rebuildable
   condition.A  As expected, the cam had a flat lobe.A  Dave plotted the
   cam and the specs (196/204 degrees @ 0.050", 117 degrees lobe
   separation angle, installed on a 114 degrees intake centerline) suggest
   it was a stock 1970 to early 1971 part.A  The heads were verified to be
   of the desirable closed chamber variety but did not have the original
   (and failure prone) Ford valves.A  The intakes checked out and were the
   right 2.19" diameter for the seats but had 0.100" longer stems.A  The
   exhausts were 1.65" diameter.A  However, all the valves had the OEM
   multi-groove loose-fit keeper design and were replaced with new single
   groove stainless valves from SI in the standard Cleveland length and
   stock 2.19"/1.71" diameters.A  Hardened seats were installed and the
   left had side cylinder head had 4 bolts broken off that Dave had to
   extract.A  The stock pedestal mount rocker arms were inspected and
   found to be in good condition but are of the lugged variety:A
   A [4]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleve
   land%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_stock_rockers_showing_oil_zps
   htqc6y6n.jpg[/IMG]
   There are two types of stock 351C rocker arms (lugged and unlugged):
   A [5]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleve
   land%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/OHOnews16of38_zpsdsyg293s.jpg[/IMG]
   The ones with a lug on top have a clearance problem with cams of 0.550"
   or greater lift.A  The pushrod tube can contact the lower position of
   the rocker arm when the valve is fully open.A  Dave compared the two
   styles of rockers side-by-side and there is a noticeable difference
   back under the pushrod seat where the angle up from the bottom of the
   pivot is less steep on the lugged style and would get closer to the
   pushrod.A  He noted it would really be a problem if a 3/8" diameter
   pushrod was used.A  I offered up a Crane rocker arm guideplate
   conversion kit and 1.7:1 Crane roller rockers but it was ultimately
   decided to keep the lugged rockers and just limit the lift of the
   cam.A  In keeping with the budget rebuild theme, a hydraulic flat
   tappet cam was chosen with emphasis was on low and mid-range
   performance with a 6000 RPM red line, assuming 91 octane fuel.A  Mike
   had run a Comp 280H Magnum flat tappet cam in his Pantera's previous
   351C (open chamber 4V heads with domed pistons and Blue Thunder dual
   plane) and found it pretty lazy below 3000 RPM so wanted something that
   worked better down low.A  The Comp 280H has 60 degrees of overlap with
   specs of:
   A Comp 280H MagnumA  280/280 degrees seat duration (230/230 @ 0.050"),
   0.530"/0.530" lift, 110 LSA
   So we'd likely be looking at something around 54 degrees of overlap.A
   Specific instructions from Mike were:
   "The goal is to maximize torque in the low- and mid-range, with a 5500
   RPM power
   A peak and 6000 shift point.A  This engine will never see more than
   6000 rpm so
   A there's no need to build it with a cam that is dead down low, and
   would continue
   A to build power at 6500-7000 rpm.A  For simplicity and cost sake, this
   means a
   A traditional non-roller hydraulic cam."
   I had some time to kill on a flight to Finland, so I modeled the engine
   in Dynomation and ran a bunch of off-the-shelf hydraulic flat tappet
   camshafts through, along with a few mild hydraulic rollers.A  Some of
   the cams evaluated were:
   A Isky 264 Megacam..264/264..(214/214)..0.525"/0.525"..108 LSAA A A
   2000-5800 RPM
   A Isky 270 Megacam..270/270..(221/221)..0.542"/0.542"..108 LSAA A A
   2000-6200 RPM
   A Lunati 10320311...275/275..(225/225)..0.550"/0.550"..108 LSAA A A
   1800-5800 RPM (old p/n 07111)
   A Erson E220421.....296/296..(228/228)..0.545"/0.545"..108 LSAA A A
   3000-6000 RPM
   A Bullet 138268.....268/268..(218/218)..0.528"/0.528"..110 LSAA A A
   Good idle, good street and off-road performance.
   A Lunati 10320302...276/276..(221/221)..0.524"/0.524"..110 LSAA A A
   idle-5600 (identical to Ultradyne below)
   A Ultradyne.........276/276..(221/221)..0.524"/0.524"..110 LSAA A A
   Performance and economy for 4WD's, pickups, and Panteras.
   A Elgin E-1801P.....284/284..(222/222)..0.539"/0.539"..110 LSA
   A Crower 15173......280/287..(219/225)..0.530"/0.524"..110 LSAA A A
   2300-6300, 3800 RPM peak torque, 5700 RPM peak power
   A Crower 15174......289/295..(227/233)..0.555"/0.547"..110 LSAA A A
   2400-6400, 3900 RPM peak torque, 5900 RPM peak power
   A Erson E220222.....284/296..(220/228)..0.545"/0.545"..110 LSAA A A
   2500-5500, strong mid-range
   A Comp Cams 270H....270/270..(224/224)..0.519"/0.519"..110 LSA
   A Comp Cams 280H....280/280..(230/230)..0.530"/0.530"..110 LSA
   A Bullet Custom 1...275/275..(223/223)..0.567"/0.567"..109 LSAA A A
   Bullet HF275/328 CRA lobes (Ford lifter diameter)
   A Bullet Custom 2...275/277..(223/228)..0.567"/0.580"..111 LSAA A A
   Bullet HF275/328 and HF277/335 CRA lobes
   A Reed TM276H-11....276/276..(223/223)..0.543"/0.543"..111 LSA
   Many of the profiles were eliminated with the decision to stick with
   the lugged rocker arms due to the maximum lift considerations.A  I also
   evaluated all combinations of the following Reed Torque Master lobes:
   A Seat...0.050" Lift (w/1.73:1 rocker ratio)
   A 252....205....0.497"
   A 264....214....0.519"
   A 272....218....0.531"
   A 276....223....0.543"
   A 280....227....0.548"
   Dave likes the Torque Master lobes.A  They are quiet, reliable and run
   well.A  Since the engine won't be spun past the HP peak very often,
   there's no need for the usual extra exhaust duration so a single
   pattern cam was picked.A  Also, on a 351C with 2.19" canted valves, I
   might widen the LSA to 111 degrees to reduce reversion but, with the
   minimal overlap, that's not an issue so we stayed with a 109 degrees
   LSA.A  The cam was sourced through Steve Demos (formerly of Reed Cams)
   and with the smallish 650 CFM carb, small port dual plane intake
   manifold and shorty Pantera headers is quite mild:
   A Demos 272H-109A A  272/272 (218/218) 0.531"/0.531"A  109 LSAA  108
   ICL
   Valve springs are PBM/Erson 3100 set at 1.810" intake and 1.860"
   exhaust for loads of 110 lbs seated, 270 lbs open intake and 93 lbs
   seated, 250 lbs open exhaust.A  There were no signs of valvetrain
   instability on the dyno up to the 5800 RPM maximum that was run on the
   dyno.
   A
   A [6]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleve
   land%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_rockers_springs_zps8kzaiusa.j
   pg
   All the older dual plane intake manifolds we've had on the flow bench
   have had good and bad runners and have benefited from plenum entry
   work.A  Dave did some minor work on the plenum and port exits and
   welded the exhaust crossover shut:
   A [7]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleve
   land%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_Performer_plenum_zpsbtdzu2ot.
   jpg
   A [8]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleve
   land%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_Performer_runner_roof_zpsfmub
   3uot.jpg
   A [9]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleve
   land%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_Performer_runner_zpskf3l6dn0.
   jpg
   On the dyno, the engine was tested with the restrictive Euro GTS
   headers and ANSA mufflers but will get the stainless steel Wilkinson
   Euro GTS replacements that performed much better in previous testing.A
   This shot shows the entire Euro GTS Pantera exhaust with the mufflers
   rotated to clear the dyno:
   A [10]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Clev
   eland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_GTS_headers_mufflers_zpshcxa
   hdp9.jpg
   and a shot from the front showing just the headers:
   A [11]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Clev
   eland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_351C_on_dyno_zpsukbzjwso.jpg
   The Pantera Euro GTS Ansa muffler bodies are quite small with long
   tips:
   A [12]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Clev
   eland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_GTS_mufflers_zpsex7zrshf.jpg
   and the GTS headers are oddly sized with large 2" outer diameter but
   short (16 to 22 inches typically) primaries along with a short tri-y
   style collector having a small 2 1/4" ID outlet:A
   A [13]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Clev
   eland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_GTS_headers_zpsipaecpjs.jpg
   In testing, the headers do pretty well on peak power but give up quite
   a bit of peak torque (25+ ft-lbs) when compared with more conventional
   long tube headers.A  The mufflers are quite restrictive, costing on the
   order of 50 HP on 500+ HP engines.
   When Dave first fired the engine, it didn't sound so hot so he pulled
   the donor plug wires off and replaced them which made the engine sound
   much better.A  Turns out several of the wires were bad.A  The cam was
   broken in, rings seated and some pulls made to optimize the timing and
   jetting.A  With the closed chamber heads, best timing was 14 degrees
   initial and 36 degrees total.A  Dave ordered a 4 hole 1 inch tall
   spacer that he modified into a design with two oval shaped holes to
   match the oval holes on the dual plane Performer intake.
   A [14]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Clev
   eland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_phenolic_spacer_zpsfafucadx.
   jpg
   The spacer helped torque by about 5 lbs-ft but peak HP was unchanged.A
   The best pull was with the GTS headers but without the ANSA mufflers:
   A 378 HP @ 5700 RPM
   A 396 ft-lbs @ 4100 RPM
   A
   A [15]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Clev
   eland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Drew%20351C%20No%20Mufflers_zpsjzywch2
   4.jpg
   A
   With ANSA mufflers and a 1" spacer, it made:
   A 355 HP @ 5800 RPM
   A 388 ft-lbs @ 3900 RPM
   A [16]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Clev
   eland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Drew%20351%20C%20With%201%20Inch%20Spa
   cer_zps0g1rzpnj.jpg
   The ANSA Euro GTS mufflers cost 23 HP and 8 ft-lbs on this combo.A  The
   non-GTS ANSA mufflers are even more restrictive while the Wilkinson
   exhaust should be closer to the open header pull.A  The engine ended up
   peaking at 5700 RPM with nearly 400 ft-lbs of torque so I'd say we
   pretty much nailed Mike's request.A  With their overly large ports, its
   easy to kill the bottom end on a 351C-4V with the wrong combo (too much
   cam, not enough compression, wrong intake and/or headers) but this
   build demonstrates that with nothing more than a well thought selection
   of parts and careful assembly, a 351C-4V can make quite respectable
   torque in a daily driver RPM range.
   If you were to remove the lift restriction imposed by the lugged rocker
   arms and run more aggressive hydraulic flat tappet lobes, there should
   be more power to be had, even with the same modest cam overlap.A  I ran
   a cam of the same 54 degrees overlap but using more aggressive cam
   lobes:
   A Bullet 275/277 (223/228) 0.567"/0.580" 111 LSA
   through Dynomation and, with no other changes, the simulation predicts
   an additional 13 HP peaking 200 RPM higher.A  The lobes might be a bit
   noisy, though.A  If you were to build a similar engine for a Mustang or
   Cougar, previous testing of 1 3/4" long tube Mustang headers have added
   25 to 30 ft-lbs of peak torque and the MPG Stinger exhaust stuffers
   were also worth some peak torque.A  If the intake doesn't have to fit
   under a stock Pantera engine screen, I'd wager there's another 20 to 25
   HP to be had with an Edelbrock Performer RPM Air Gap high rise dual
   plane and, perhaps, a carb with 50 more CFM.A  For comparisons sake,
   here are some A/B measurements I made of the various dual planes
   available for the 351C.A  The measurements represent the drop from a
   straight edge laid across the carb pad to the closest point where the
   end rail bends inward (each end).A  Measurements are in inches:
   A IntakeA A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A
    A A A  AA A A A A A A  B
   A Edelbrock F-351 PerformerA  4VA A A A A A A A A A  3 3/4A A A A  4
   3/8
   A Edelbrock Performer RPM Air Gap 2VA A A A A  4 1/2A A A A  5 5/8
   A Ford aluminum 4VA A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A  3
   1/4A A A A  4 3/8
   A Scott CookA A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A
   3 3/4A A A A  5
   A Blue Thunder/Shelby/Holman MoodyA A A A A A A  4 7/16A A A  5 3/8
   Note that both the Scott Cook and Blue Thunder dual planes are the
   canted pad versions but both are available with flat carb pads for
   Panteras that mount the engine level.A  Note that, being an air gap
   design, the Performer RPM would be slower to warm up.
   I'm quite interested in hearing what Lori's Pantera does for fuel
   economy.A  If I'd thought of it at the time, Lori's engine would have
   been perfect to test my ported spread bore Offenhauser Dual Port intake
   manifold with Carter ThermoQuad.A  The vacuum advance unit on the Ford
   distributor was blown so Dave replaced it with a single diaphragm style
   that is adjustable and measured how much each turn of the adjustment
   changes the total:
   A [17]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Clev
   eland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_351C_vacuum_advance_zpsldcle
   goc.jpg
   Dave connected it to the ported vacuum source so it is not active at
   idle and one turn on the adjustment equals 5 degrees change in the
   amount of timing it can add to the engine under light load
   conditions.A  There's one turn of adjustment "into" the pod so it gives
   the engine five degrees more when its at part throttle above idle.A  In
   the Pantera, with the center bulkhead cover removed, there is access to
   the front of the engine so Mike and Lori can adjust it from there for
   best cruise fuel economy.A  Here's a link to a video of Dave messing
   with the carburetor/idle settings and the vacuum advance:
   A [18]https://onedrive.live.com/redir?resid=a9d064308c1f92bf!87848&auth
   key=!AGb4h-XRCGW9F1Y&ithint=video%2cmp4
   Overall, the engine parts list looks like:
   A Holley model 4777 650 CFM double pumper carburetor with added
   electric choke
   A Edelbrock Performer 351C-4V aluminum intake manifold (with port and
   plenum work by Dave McLain)
   A Closed chamber 4V Cleveland heads
   A  Valve job, hard exhaust seats and resurfaced, machined for Viton
   seals intake and exhaust
   A  SI stainless valves in stock 2.19"/1.71" sizes
   A  PBM/Erson 502S retainers
   A  PBM/Erson 3100 valve springs set at 1.810" intake and 1.860" exhaust
   for loads of
   A A  110 lbs seated, 270 lbs open intake
   A A  93 lbs seated, 250 lbs open exhaust
   A Ford Motorsport aluminum valve covers with baffles that are welded in
   place to keep oil off of PCV and breather
   A 351C block bored to 4.020 bore size (with 3.5" stroke = 355 cubic
   inches displacement)
   A Ross flat top forged pistons
   A Ross forged flat top pistons, part number 80556, single large valve
   relief, 1.668" pin height
   A Mahle 1/16", 1/16" 3/16" standard tension ring set
   A Ford 351C connecting rods, polished, shot peened, ARP bolts
   A King rod and main bearings, 0.002", 0.0028" clearances
   A Ford 351C crank, polished, rotating assembly balanced
   A New Power Bond damper
   A Stock timing pointer corrected
   A Engine Tech gasket set
   A Ford Motorsport timing set
   A Aviaid gated and baffled Pantera road race oil pan and matching
   pickup
   A Stock volume/pressure Melling M84A oil pump
   A New Melling oil pump drive shaft
   A Joe Gibbs BR oil(8quarts)
   A Hastings LF 115 filter
   A Custom grind flat tappet hydraulic cam from Demos Cams using Reed
   272H Torque Master lobes:
   A A  272/272 seat duration, (218/218 degrees @ 0.050"), 0.531"/0.531",
   109 LSA installed on 107 degrees ICL
   A Stock Ford 351C non-adjustable rockers (with oil deflectors) and
   pushrods
   A Distributor is stock Ford with a Pertronix Ignitor kit and adjustable
   vacuum advance
   A Autolite 25 spark plugs gapped at 0.045"
   A Edelbrock aluminum water pump
   Here's a shot of the assembled long block:
   A [19]http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Clev
   eland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_longblock_zpsnee2hv8f.jpg
   Lori was pleased the that the total cost of the engine build, including
   intake and head work and a full day of dyno tuning came in at less than
   $3000.
   Dan Jones

References

   1. http://www.the351cforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=656
   2. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Ross_Piston_polished_rods_zpsvy3nm6r4.jpg
   3. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/OHOnews21of38_zpsrl5zhn8v.jpg
   4. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_stock_rockers_showing_oil_zpshtqc6y6n.jpg[/IMG]
   5. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/OHOnews16of38_zpsdsyg293s.jpg[/IMG]
   6. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_rockers_springs_zps8kzaiusa.jpg
   7. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_Performer_plenum_zpsbtdzu2ot.jpg
   8. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_Performer_runner_roof_zpsfmub3uot.jpg
   9. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_Performer_runner_zpskf3l6dn0.jpg
  10. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_GTS_headers_mufflers_zpshcxahdp9.jpg
  11. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_351C_on_dyno_zpsukbzjwso.jpg
  12. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_GTS_mufflers_zpsex7zrshf.jpg
  13. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_GTS_headers_zpsipaecpjs.jpg
  14. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_phenolic_spacer_zpsfafucadx.jpg
  15. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Drew%20351C%20No%20Mufflers_zpsjzywch24.jpg
  16. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Drew%20351%20C%20With%201%20Inch%20Spacer_zps0g1rzpnj.jpg
  17. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_351C_vacuum_advance_zpsldclegoc.jpg
  18. https://onedrive.live.com/redir?resid=a9d064308c1f92bf!87848&authkey=!AGb4h-XRCGW9F1Y&ithint=video%2cmp4
  19. http://i1127.photobucket.com/albums/l621/danielcjones2/351%20Cleveland%20Stuff/Lori%20Drew%20351C/Lori_Drew_longblock_zpsnee2hv8f.jpg


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