I have a 396 Roller motor in my 67 nova. I bought the car with this motor with a fresh build. I know it's a roller cam but have no specs. This motor sounds so damn mean, it has a pretty loopy idle. Anyway when I get on it it just doesn't have any low end balls at all. It has a great top end but even brake torqueing it just don't respond like it should. It has cast heads and a TH350 trans with a 2400 stall. I know it has a lot more any ideas?
Short of tearing it apart I don't have cam specs. The heads are pretty stock besides springs and roller rockers after about 2500 rpms it goes. I can say that for some reason there are days this motor responds pretty good but most days it's just flat at start.
It has a 750 DP holley with mec secondarys. it's an automatic with a 2400 stall. I'm just thinking wrong carb, wouldn't a vacuum secodary carb work better with they auto trans.
It really don't make sense to me to install a big roller cam with stock heads, heads are where the power is made. This is just a guess but I would almost bet that it has a Mother Thumpr cam in it. Those cams sound really wicked but they leave alot to be desired when it comes to performance. I have been told that with a proper tune, they perform fairly well but it takes a good tuner to get them there. There are retro fit kits available to install a roller cam into a standard block but a true roller cam will have roller cam bearings. Do you know what gear the rearend has? What intake and carb setup it has?
It has a 12 bolt 3.73 gears eaton posi diff,Edelbrock air gap intake with a 750 DP Holley. This motor has days it reponds fairly well but most days it's off, that's why I think carb. Would a Vacuum secondary carb be a better choice?
A vacuum secondary carb would be better in my opinion IF the cam will allow sufficient vacuum to operate it. This may be one reason it has a mechanical secondary carb on it. You would need to check how much vacuum the engine has with that cam before changing the carb.
A BB with a little 750 X should go bananas even with a bigger cam.If on some days it seems better then its time to tune it.put plugs in it,take the bowls off the carb lets check the jets and timing at idle and total timing.Im sure you have a minor problem
To begin with, set the timing curve up correctly. Info here.
Once the timing curve is set up right, see if the carb problem has gone away or is much better.
Knowing the cam specs will help. Short of pulling the cam or timing cover to get the numbers off the cam, you can find the specs close enough for tuning by following the info here.
that little car with 400 cubes will scare the crap out of you when its tuned.some minor bugs,you dont need any major parts unless the engine is damaged. A big cam wont hurt you
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