Overall intention of the project is to build an early Holden suitable for the drags, but is still (just) able to be driven on the street. Power plant will be a 138 grey motor, Norman blown, Repco headed and Hilborn injected. Aiming for dual-fuel: pump fuel for tootling around, and methanol at the track. I am going to try for period-correct (think late 60’s/early 70’s), but only to a point… there will need to be some concessions to modern safety. I recognise that this thing is likely to be a pig to drive on the street, but can also imagine driving to the shops, with the car struggling to idle, and me with a huge grin. Take it to Eastern Creek, and flog the snot out of it until something breaks. Think of it as an old hoon’s project

Aim of the project is to use my FB daily driver and retain NSW road rego. The modifications I am planning will need engineering, so I’m going to have to dial the engineer in pretty soon (about the same time that I get the wagon final engineered). I want to make the minimum of change to the vehicle that I can, and still make engineering (e.g. I will need to go disk brakes, but am not intending to go HR front end).
I’ll share some of the thinking as I go along – aiming to dispel some of the old Holden myths along the way.
The intention is to take one of my spare seized grey motors and have it rebored. I initially figured on boring the thing out as far as I could (you can’t beat cubic inches) and using the JP Performance part number 0196 pistons (3¼” bore). This would take the grey out to 156ci. Some research with the lumpy humpy crowd shows that this is perhaps not the smartest move. The JP pistons are sand cast and heavy. They are unlikely to take the kind of abuse that I intend throwing at them. Instead, my intent is to get some pistons made up by Special Piston Services. They will make up a forged set. There are a couple of advantages:
a) The forgies will take a lot more abuse than the cast pistons.
b) I can customise the pistons to suit valve clearance and compression ratio I am targeting (being a blown motor I need to be careful around over-compression). Compression ratio will depend on cylinder head volume, which I can’t work out until I CC the Repco head.
c) I can use fancy modern rings for a better seal. To do this, the trick is to use a metric bore size (there are a lot more ring options in metric). The standard Holden grey motor 138ci engine block is 3 1/16” (77.7875mm).
• 10 thou over is 78.0415mm
• 20 thou over is 78.2955mm
• 30 thou over is 78.5495mm
• 40 thou over is 78.8035mm
• 60 thou over is 79.3115mm
I will bore to 78mm (or 78.5mm) depending on what the bore looks like once it is apart.
So for now I need to get the old seized motor out, get it apart and get it bored while I wait for the head to be finished. Pistons to follow.
Cheers,
Harv