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Old 06-09-2012, 09:38 AM
tirod tirod is offline
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And the conversation focuses on what's under the hood - when the record shows that the 289 won the championship.

Balance is more important than engine. If the chassis can't put 550 hp or 600 ftlbs of torque down to the pavement, you get exactly what everyone describes - tires spinning in third gear at 60mph.

That is NOT something you want to happen turning in to a tight corner in traffic on cool pavement at dusk as the dew is forming. It IS exactly why the big blocks were termed dangerous - don't forget, Shelby sold every 289 built, but it took 18 months longer to push the 427/428 off the lots. They were not considered user friendly. Bill Cosby shipped his back. Smart man.

Read very carefully, many of the 500 hp proponents aren't using this as a daily driver. But the small blocks were - and still are. They didn't abruptly break away and lose traction because of driver error.

If you need a testosterone injection on the weekend, a big block will certainly do it, if you want to use the car daily, consider carefully. Balance is much more of what cars have now, not brute levels of horsepower stuffed into a vintage chassis. What good is 550 hp if you can only use it 5% of the time? Better to size the motor for what you can do 85% of the time, and develop the chassis to use what it has.

Check the lap times of the day, the 427 was a bare few seconds ahead on tracks - it's poor handling from traction limited it's potential for what it was built to do - race on road courses. Ford just needed a counterpoint to the 427 Vette, and they got it, another overweight poor handling bull in a china shop.
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