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1969 Road Runner Project, Part IV

Major Muscle in the Engine Compartment
By Jerry Pitt
Photography by Jerry Pitt, Ken Lazzeri
1969 Plymouth Road Runner Black Roof Driver Side Front View

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Ken and the crew at Indy Cylinder Head started with Mopar Performance Parts' cast iron street RB block (P4529851). Termed a water block, it maintains water flow between cylinders for the demands of street use as opposed to the siamesed bore offerings. Siamesed-bore RB blocks can be bored to 4.500-inches. As received from MPP, the "water block" maintains the stock 4.25-inch bore diameter; however, Indy Cylinder Head opens it up to a 4.375-inch bore--which is "the largest bore diameter this cylinder block can accommodate," according to Ken Lazzeri. All of the MP RB blocks have the stock 10.72-inch deck height.
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Indy's capability as a full-service engine builder extends from their own block and cylinder head designs and castings to their seven large CNC machining centers for customer-specific machine work, as is shown here. The same processes used on their own line of Indy Cylinder Head products are also applied to Mopar Performance blocks like the one used in this 542ci application.
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Specific machine work for the 542ci combination includes clearancing the lower skirt of the bore for rod clearance on each cylinder. The CNC's precision work guarantees exactly the same results every time.
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Because Ken chose to accommodate the use of a Lunati crank in this application, additional clearancing near the original location of the internal oil pickup required that the pick-up be fed from the pan rather than the stock block location. The CNC work accomplished here shows the cross section of the block's original internal oil pump pick-up location and orifice leading to the stock external pump.
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The popular P4529851 block features both the Hemi mounting pads and the Wedge motor mount ears.
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When weight is a factor, Indy Cylinder Head also removes the Hemi motor mount pads to flush on their in-house CNC which results in up to a 45-pound weight reduction per block.
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Part of the effort in building the 542ci stroker RB engine for Holley Performance Products' Project Roadrunner was to further determine the feasibility of using a forged Lunati crank. The Lunati crank is formed from a "generic" forging--a die that would fit big-block Chevrolets, but could be used for any big block with the same bore spacing. The assumption was that this generic crank could also be used in other applications. Holley plans on a late-2000 release of an RB crankshaft for big-block Mopars.
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Obstacles to making this work are apparent first from the view of the flywheel flange. For Chrysler automatic applications, we are uncertain what the results would be with the thicker flange when mounted to the torque converter. Clearances would require measuring. Four-speed applications like that of the Holley Roadrunner will have no problem with this situation.
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Ken Lazzeri is quick to point out that the Lunati crank is made of excellent material, however, the forging die is that of a big-block Chevy design. As a result, the counterweights are too short. On a Chrysler-specific forging, the measurement from the bearing surface to outside edge of the counterweight is 2.400 inches as indicated by the dotted line in the photo. On the Lunati crank--shown here--the measurement is 2.200 inches. That .200-inches short is critical--especially as it relates to your wallet. It takes as much as $750 in balancing expense to add enough Mallory metal to the counterweights to balance the Lunati crank assembly. When using a standard Chrysler forging, that balancing expense would run approximately $250.

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