by Darr Hawthorne
6/7/04
ometimes
when you are busy your hot rod takes a back
seat. With the beginning of the new drag racing
season, both my son Zak and I have been hard-pressed
to get onto the next phase of improvements to
DROs Project Street FX Altered Wheelbase
Chevy II debuted in the January 2004 issue.
This first upgrade was to battle a weakness
we had found with cooling the 468-inch Chevrolet
big block engine. While wed installed
a new 4-core radiator and separate oil cooler
from the beginning, often the water temperature
rose to 215 degrees and a couple of times hit
225 or 230. There are no inner fender wells
on this car and to keep the 60s A/FX look
we felt that a traditional fan shroud wasnt
very interesting either. The fan had already
been changed over to a 17 inch, six-blade Flex-a-Lite
unit, which helped air flow a little, so we
needed to find other solutions to this nagging
overheating issue.
Since
the engine used a stock, steel Chevrolet big
block long water pump, with unknown
miles, this seemed like a good place to start.
After reading up on all of the aluminum aftermarket
pumps, we found that Milodon made a pump that
would move more coolant with a claimed horsepower
increase. However, none of these units were
available from Jegs, Summit, or the local
speed shops, so our other choice was Weiands
Action Plus model 925-8242 pump which we found
in stock at Jegs. This Weiand aluminum
water pump sports a 5/8-inch heavy-duty shaft
and 6-blade anti-cavitation impeller, claiming
optimum flow rate while using less power.
When
speaking recently with Kevin McClelland at Flowmaster,
he recommended trying a set of their new Flowmaster
Super 40 3-inch mufflers.
Reportedly the tone of these new
mufflers was going to be deeper, interior noise
would be reduced, they would make more horsepower
and somehow the newly designed muffler made
the engine run cooler. With this combination
of mufflers and high volume water pump, it seemed
that we might have the winning ticket to reduce
the big blocks heat while cruising to
Bobs Big Boy on a hot summer night.
The change-out of the water pump took about
90 minutes, but a side trip to the nearby Auto
Zone found the gaskets we needed, somehow they
were not included with the pump shipped from
Jegs. It was a simple installation and
the fit was perfect.
Just about anyone with a stout cam and headers
driving on the street knows of your engine exhaust
noise ability to set off the alarm on a parked
vehicle as you drive by. Since wed been
driving the car on the street, we developed
a game to play on the way to local events called
Alarm Golf. When driving on city streets the
low-end muffled noise would set off car alarms,
sometimes just a brief blip and the alarm resets:
-one point, but if we could fully engage an
car alarm: -three points.
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