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'54 Dodge Red Ram - Baby Hemi?

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by stan292, Jun 11, 2006.

  1. pasadenahotrod
    Joined: Feb 13, 2007
    Posts: 11,775

    pasadenahotrod
    Member
    from Texas

    Andy from Kerrville TX has a Red Ram hemi in his nice 32 Ford Roadster hooked up to a all-synchro early 60s Ford 3speed using a column shift. YAHOO>
    A very fun car to drive, rides good, handles good, looks good.
     
  2. hemisedan
    Joined: Sep 9, 2008
    Posts: 21

    hemisedan
    Member

    Nice looking motor there in that 35. I'm doing, pretty much the same with a 38 Ford Standard tudor sedan, but mine is a 57, 325 ci. Dual quads with the baby 273 hip0 afbs, put a harmonic balancer on it, crank girdle, Pontiac H-rods, D-500 heads with adjustable rockers, and the hump valve covers.

    Yes, I've gone over-kill on the engine, but what the heck, I wanted the hemi look. Oh yes, I did find a NOS, never used, Isky Cam from 1961. Yes, things can be found on ebay for these motors. Hopefully, this year it will finally hit the road.
     
  3. hemisedan
    Joined: Sep 9, 2008
    Posts: 21

    hemisedan
    Member

    Just a note here: I don't know where you guys get the idea that these motors are all that big, or wide for that matter. I measured off a small block Chevy. 325 Dodge hemi 4" shorter in length. With exhaust headers on sbc: 325 Dodge hemi 3" narrower at the widest point. Weight: 325 Dodge hemi with aluminum water pump, dual quad intake, small alternator, starter, Sanden a/c, and headers 543 lbs. Stock with all the cast iron parts: 608 lbs. The aluminum stuff really takes the weight off in a hurry.

    Yes, I realize that the Chryslers and Desoto hemi's get heavy, as well as big in a hurry, but the little Dodge? Well, from what I measured, taint so. Also, running the steering shaft past the little hemi was a breeze, as the Sanderson headers go down, rather than out, as the sbc's do. Horspower? Well, stock this D-500 engine was in the 315 hp range. I figure with the small amount of add ons that we've made, it should be in the 350 hp range. That's enough power for me, and then there's the looks. Go hemi.
     
  4. igby
    Joined: Aug 6, 2005
    Posts: 109

    igby
    Member

    anyone know where to get a assembly manual for a 241-270 hemi and a poly engine one too?
     
    Last edited: Jan 3, 2010
  5. George
    Joined: Jan 1, 2005
    Posts: 7,725

    George
    Member

    A what??:confused:
     
  6. 73RR
    Joined: Jan 29, 2007
    Posts: 7,198

    73RR
    Member

    ...would that be the same as a Factory Service manual.....?

    Re-pops on ebay.

    .
     
  7. George
    Joined: Jan 1, 2005
    Posts: 7,725

    George
    Member

    Whats a 210-214 Hemi???:confused:
     
  8. krooser
    Joined: Jul 25, 2004
    Posts: 4,584

    krooser
    Member

    Rare...
     
  9. DragonArt
    Joined: Jun 10, 2007
    Posts: 5

    DragonArt
    Member

  10. hellsgaterods
    Joined: Dec 8, 2010
    Posts: 534

    hellsgaterods
    Member

    last chrysler 331 hemi i had, i got $1000 for it, it was all apart, and the crank needed cleaned up, but i had a new set of arias pistons that went with it. there will be the casting number on the engine at the front of where the valley pan is top right on the block.
    d44-1001 = 1953 red ram 241 2 bbl 140 h.p.
    d50-1001 = 1954 red ram 241 2 bbl 140 h.p.
    d50 (1,2,3) = 1954 red ram 241 2 bbl 150 h.p.
    hope this helps. info. is from my hot heads book
     
  11. RDR
    Joined: May 30, 2009
    Posts: 1,489

    RDR
    Member

    my 354 came out of a Dodge dump truck....the bigger Dodge trucks used the same hemi (but industrial)as the Chrysler cars...the valve covers are not stamped with the usual "Firepower" or "Imperial" as their cars had..these had decals on them with "Power Giant 354"
     
    Last edited: Feb 23, 2011
  12. ferdball
    Joined: Jul 1, 2011
    Posts: 8

    ferdball
    Member
    from mapleton

    I'm in the process of acquiring an all original 53 coronet with the 241 that has been sitting for at LEAST 9 years and would like to get all the information I can about how to fire it up the RIGHT WAY. I don't want to botch it up. Can anyone point me in a good direction where I can find more info on the do's and dont's i.e. oiling the rockers and guides properly etc...??

    VERY EXCITED and have got to learn to take it slow....and not get in a rush,

    Thanks in advance
    ferdbeard


    QUOTE-------------
    So true.....After reading as much as I have I know not to fire these hemi's after they have been sitting for a few years without first oiling rockers and guides properly.;)

    ----------
     
  13. 73RR
    Joined: Jan 29, 2007
    Posts: 7,198

    73RR
    Member

    Well, you won't find a 'user manual' kinda format. At least you are aware of the potential rocker arm oiling concerns.
    Whether or not you can safely fire an old, long-sitting engine depends alot on things like how and where it stored as well as the internal condition (moisture levels in the oil, how much oil, sludge).
    Hell, does it even roll over???? If not you're pulling heads.
    I'll tell you to pull the valve covers and the oil pan and run them thru a hot tank (also, the oil pump and screen assembly). I'll also suggest not trying to scrape crap from inside the block assembly since you can easily loosen chunks that might plug the freshly cleaned screen assembly.
    Beyond that, the usual fresh oil/filter, new sparklers, fresh fuel...

    my 2¢ ...others will differ

    .
     
  14. George
    Joined: Jan 1, 2005
    Posts: 7,725

    George
    Member

    Minimally change oil, get somec pre SM type oil. pull the dizzy b& int shaft & run up the oil pump to get oil every where, turning engine to get oil to rockers. Like gary said, if it's stuck, don't bother trying to start.
     
  15. TR Waters
    Joined: Nov 18, 2006
    Posts: 1,439

    TR Waters
    Member
    from Vermont
    1. Early Hemi Tech

    there is no 259 or 301. there is however a 291, 341 and 345.

    I sell the stepped balancer keys and a few other parts for the Dodges, like a front fill valley cover.
     

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  16. ferdball
    Joined: Jul 1, 2011
    Posts: 8

    ferdball
    Member
    from mapleton

    Thanks for the input on the restart. I've been reading a lot of great posts on the matter here on the H.A.M.B. I'll keep telling myself to take it slow and not get in a rush.

    The last one I brought back from the dust was a 48 truck and it fired right up on the first try with fresh gas and clean lines and new plugs and wires..... course it's the old flathead six and probably not quite as finicky.

    [​IMG]
     
  17. Rusty O'Toole
    Joined: Sep 17, 2006
    Posts: 9,659

    Rusty O'Toole
    Member

    A tip for you Red Ram fans... they also made a Polysphere version of this engine that was identical except for the heads and exhaust manifolds. Block, crankshaft, even the intake manifold.

    So if you see a Poly engine in the junkyard, in a Dodge, Dodge truck or some Plymouth 1955, you can turn it into a Hemi with just the heads.

    Worth knowing if you are trying to build up an engine from parts, or just want to have a spare engine around.

    There was also a Poly version of the Chrysler hemi, used in the cheaper Windsor model. And poly DeSoto.

    Then there was the later Polysphere used in Dodge and Plymouth 1956-66. It had no hemi counterpart.

    Each Poly engine had its own distinctive shape of valve covers. The early ones were scalloped, the later ones more of a saw tooth pattern. Once you see them you can tell them apart at a glance.
     
  18. Weasel
    Joined: Dec 30, 2007
    Posts: 6,698

    Weasel
    Member

    Polys are cool....
     
  19. moparmonkey
    Joined: Aug 14, 2009
    Posts: 565

    moparmonkey
    Member
    from NorCal

    Not completely accurate. There was no 259 or 301 Hemi. But there was a '55 301 Chrysler Poly that will accept 331/354/392 heads, and a Dodge 270 based 259/260 Poly found in Plymouths and Dodge trucks (also '55).

    Also, the only DeSoto poly was actually a 325 Dodge, that was a 1957 only thing. There was no true DeSoto poly that shared parts with the DeSoto hemi's like the Chrysler or Dodge Poly's did with their hemi counterparts.
     
  20. Weasel
    Joined: Dec 30, 2007
    Posts: 6,698

    Weasel
    Member

    And the 1956 Plymouth poly shares a block with the Dodge Super Red Ram but the Plymouth has side motor mounts - the only year for this....
     
  21. OK guys..I need to know if the intake off of a 392, 1957 or 58 will fit on a 1954 331. It is a 4 barrell intake.
    Thanks for the help
     
  22. Dennis I don't think so the 392 is a raised block, making it to wide for the 331
     
  23. 73RR
    Joined: Jan 29, 2007
    Posts: 7,198

    73RR
    Member

    Yes, it will bolt-on...although the 392 is a 'taller' deck, Mopar modified the heads instead of the manifold....but using a 'dry' intake on a '54-331 leaves you without a t-stat.

    .
     
  24. Hnstray
    Joined: Aug 23, 2009
    Posts: 12,355

    Hnstray
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from Quincy, IL


    TR Waters response was correct....his statement was in reply to a prior post that listed 11 hemi displacements, which included 259 & 301. TR correctly pointed out there were no factory 259 or 301 hemi engines.

    Ray
     
  25. moparmonkey
    Joined: Aug 14, 2009
    Posts: 565

    moparmonkey
    Member
    from NorCal

    Neither post actually mentioned anything about what was, or was not, available from the factory.

    Which is why I underlined hemi in my response, and added that the the 301, 259 and 260 displacements were in fact Poly engines. But, since those blocks are identical to hemi blocks, there's no reason that there can't be 301, 259 or 260 hemi's.

    301 hemi's were used quite a bit at Bonneville to get hemi's into smaller displacement classes. And truck engines were rebuilt all the time with whatever parts were on hand. My point was only that you can in fact find 301, 259, and 260 hemi's out there. That they aren't factory I think has little bearing on this forum, since very little here is factory.

    I have a 315 Dodge "hemi" in my garage that started life as a 315 truck poly. Is it any less a hemi than a 315 that rolled off the assembly line as one? No. I bought a Plymouth coded 260 that was pulled out of a '55 Dodge convertible, it was a replacement engine swapped in by a dealer. Stranger things have happened.

    I was simply adding some information that might prove helpful to someone that comes across a converted Poly engine, or has a Poly that they want to convert.
     
  26. mart3406
    Joined: May 31, 2009
    Posts: 3,055

    mart3406
    Member
    from Canada

    -------------------
    Hmm?? We kinda' got off the
    original topic of this tread, which
    started out being about 241 Dodge
    "Baby Hemis", but anyway....:rolleyes::D

    The 392 has a higher deck height
    than the 331 and 354's - but the
    331- 354 and 392 intakes are all
    exactly the same width and will
    interchange. To make up for the
    392 block's higher deck height,
    the 392 heads were cast with a
    slightly lowered and slightly
    longer intake port - which also,
    by the way, because of their
    lowered intake port position,
    the 392 heads generally don't
    flow quite as well as the 331-354
    heads - (and definitely not as well
    as the good two-year-only "big
    port" '54 & '55 331-354 "555"
    heads). But If your 331 is at least
    a mid-'54 or later engine, the
    '57-58 392 intake is a straight
    bolt on. The only caution that
    would negate or at least seriously
    complicate your planned intake
    swap, is if you have an early 331
    - ie - a 1951, '52, or '53 model
    engine (and supposedly, also
    some early-1954's model engines
    too) that had the thermostat
    housing cast integral with the
    intake manifold and also had
    slightly different water passage
    locations in the heads. But if
    your 331 uses a separate water
    crossover manifold that bolts to
    the front of the heads to locate
    the thermostat, you're 'good to
    go' with the '57-'58 392 intake.

    Mart3406
    ==========
     
  27. sunbeam
    Joined: Oct 22, 2010
    Posts: 6,219

    sunbeam
    Member

    Chris Nielson is still there got a cam from him last month.
     
  28. George
    Joined: Jan 1, 2005
    Posts: 7,725

    George
    Member

    On off the Thread topics like 331 intakes...put Hemi Tech Index in search & start reading. A 241 that is nominally 7.0 or 7.1 measured out @ 6.19:1 on webrodder.:eek:
     
  29. George
    Joined: Jan 1, 2005
    Posts: 7,725

    George
    Member

    There were no 260s, just people who insist on calling 259s that.
     
  30. TR Waters
    Joined: Nov 18, 2006
    Posts: 1,439

    TR Waters
    Member
    from Vermont
    1. Early Hemi Tech

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