TheAutoBuilder.com

1175 HP

Track Tests Prove Great Results

Author

Picture of Will Smith

Will Smith

Story & Photography

We first wrote about this 565-cubic-inch Dart “Big M” engine, equipped with Dart Big Chief II Pro Stock-type aluminum heads, back in October ’04. The engine builder was Quarter Mile Performance in Chatsworth, California, and at the time, we called it “possibly the world’s most powerful four-barrel big-block.” It produced 1037 horsepower at 7200 rpm and 806 lb-ft of torque at 5500 rpm–plenty stout by anyone’s standards.

This engine, and others like it, has opened up a brand-new chapter in the ever-evolving, wild world of Chevrolet power. By design it has a bore and stroke of 4.60 inches by 4.25 inches and Big Chief II heads, which are about 2 inches taller, that feature oval-shaped intake ports. This, they say, is for maximum cylinder filling. Years ago, creative racers would angle-mill heads to arrive at the desired combustion chamber size and to improve the valve angle in combination with the incoming intake flow. These heads are nicknamed “11-degree” heads, as they have been designed with a built-in 11-degree angle right out of the box. There’s no angle milling needed here. A special valvetrain is necessary, along with longer stem valves. Quarter Mile Performance feels that these heads are worth 200 additional horsepower over the very best “shorter” heads.

This engine, and others like it, has opened up a brand-new chapter in the ever-evolving, wild world of Chevrolet power. By design it has a bore and stroke of 4.60 inches by 4.25 inches and Big Chief II heads, which are about 2 inches taller, that feature oval-shaped intake ports. This, they say, is for maximum cylinder filling. Years ago, creative racers would angle-mill heads to arrive at the desired combustion chamber size and to improve the valve angle in combination with the incoming intake flow. These heads are nicknamed “11-degree” heads, as they have been designed with a built-in 11-degree angle right out of the box. There’s no angle milling needed here. A special valvetrain is necessary, along with longer stem valves. Quarter Mile Performance feels that these heads are worth 200 additional horsepower over the very best “shorter” heads.

The short-block features a Crower Ultra-Light crankshaft with Bill Miller connecting rods and pistons. The camshaft is a Comp Cams roller with a split valve lift of 0.850-inch intake and 0.775-inch exhaust. The duration is also split at 282/292 degrees. The original four-barrel intake manifold is a Dart item designed for this application. The carburetor is a DaVinci-prepped Holley 1150cfm Dominator. But there’s more. 

Thinking we had seen something truly memorable at Quarter Mile Performance’s shop six months earlier, we were not prepared for a recent telephone call from Brad Lagman and Mike Consolo to let us know that the engine was now updated with a Ray Franks tunnel-ram intake manifold and a second identical DaVinci-prepped 1150cfm Holley Dominator carburetor. The owner of the engine wanted to compete in the new 6.20-8.00 e.t. bracket and hoped to be in the middle of the elapsed-time field in a 2200-pound rear engine dragster. Much-needed torque, resulting in additional horsepower, should enable him to do that. The combination seemed to love the additional induction and carburetion, as the Ray Franks tunnel ram and second carburetor netted 1175 horsepower, an addition of 138 horses, with a torque output of 860 lb-ft at 7200 rpm, a gain of some 63 to 100 lb-ft across the band.

In the real world, on the dragster’s initial runs with the tunnel ram, the 4000-rpm-stall-speed torque converter was no match. A higher stall speed was needed, as were traction adjustments. As it was, the dragster ran consistent 7.20 elapsed times at 185 mph. With high-6-second potential clearly within reach, the tunnel-ram-equipped Quarter Mile Performance/Dart 565 certainly sports a swagger befitting such a healthy big-block. We’ll let you know how it all progresses.

Talk about a heavy-duty valvetrain! According to Quarter Mile Performance, both Jesel and T&D make these offset rocker arm assemblies. We thought you’d like a peek.
The Ray Franks aluminum tunnel-ram intake manifold was engineered specifically for the Dart Big Chief II heads. It is a real work of art, and the dyno says so, too
We took this photo for all of you thinking about how big/tall a hoodscoop you might need. A 4-inch-tall scoop should do fine.
This photo reveals a front-drive distributor, an electric water pump and a crank trigger ignition. The belt-driven pump is a crankcase evacuation, which in a race engine can increase power by 15 to 30.

ARTICLE SOURCES

Picture of Dart Machinery Ltd.

Dart Machinery Ltd.

2097 Bart Ave.
Warren, MI 48091

248/362-1188

Picture of Ray Franks Enterprises

Ray Franks Enterprises

375 Jefferson St
New Carlisle, OH 45344

937/845-9764

Picture of Quarter Mile Performance

Quarter Mile Performance

9530 Owensmouth Ave, Ste 2,
Chatsworth, CA 91311

818/576-0816

Picture of DaVinci Carburetor

DaVinci Carburetor

4200 Pinemont Drive
Houston, TX 77018

281/964-7782

Download WordPress Themes Free
Premium WordPress Themes Download
Download WordPress Themes Free
Download Nulled WordPress Themes
udemy course download free
download intex firmware
Download WordPress Themes
free download udemy course
Scroll to Top