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Holman Moody Intake SK-50282 Buddy Bar 429 Single Carb Dominator

Started by Kent, March 13, 2024, 01:37:00 AM

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Kent

Who can give me some more infos on this one? I know they are rare and for 429 SCJ and Nascar but never had time to do more research on this one. I have it here since 15 years now.

SAAC Member from Germany and Owner of a unrestored 1967 Shelby GT500, 1968 1/2 Cobra Jet´s and some nice Mustang Fastback´s 67/68

TA Coupe

They didn't use 429 SCJ engines in Nascar. More than likely aimed at drag racing.

       Roy
If it starts it's streetable.
Overkill is just enough.

pbf777

   
Quote from: TA Coupe on March 13, 2024, 04:12:01 AM
They didn't ....................     

      Are you sure about that!    ???

      Scott.

98SVT - was 06GT

#3
429 NASCAR? The ad shows a "normal" street 429 - but as you can see in the video a BOSS 429 was under the hood. https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=4xkygPzOsxU
Previous owner 6S843 - GT350H & 68 GT500 Convert #135.
Mine: GT1 Mustang, 1998 SVT 32V, 1929 Model A Coupe, Wife's: 2004 Tbird
Member since 1975 - priceless

TA Coupe

Quote from: pbf777 on March 13, 2024, 11:24:56 AM
   
Quote from: TA Coupe on March 13, 2024, 04:12:01 AM
They didn't ....................     

      Are you sure about that!    ???

      Scott.
If they did I've never seen or heard about it  but I'm no expert. Maybe Doc will chime in?

      Roy
If it starts it's streetable.
Overkill is just enough.

pbf777

       I believe the "canted-valve" head version (vs. "Crescant" or "Hemi" BOSS 429) was introduced into the mix in maybe '71 or '72 but was put out to pasture permanently with NASCARs' 358 cubic inch rule change in '74, though I think most teams were already utilizing the 351C anyway.   :)

       Scott.

JohnSlack

For real FoMoCo racing the NASCAR engine of choice for the Superspeedways was the BOSS 429. The short track engine remained the Tunnel port 427. Roy is correct there may have been a low buck privateer that ran the 429 SCJ, however my guess is that the Holman Moody SK intake was in the pipeline in case the France family outlawed the BOSS 429.


John

crossboss

Technically, Ford experimented with the 'wedge' 385 series, and with a 400 based engine. Both, were turds.
Past owned Shelby's:
1968 GT-350--Gold
1970 GT-500--#3129--Grabber Orange.
Current lifelong projects:
1969 Mustang Fastback/FOX chassis, 5 speed, 4 wheel discs, with a modern Can-Am 494 (Boss 429), Kaase heads, intake with a 1425 cfm 'B' Autolite Inline carb, ala Trans-Am style
1968/70 Olds 442 W-30

pbf777

      I think the problem for the Ford teams was that the 427 was not going to be permitted in NASCAR competition for much longer as it was out of production as far as "in chassis fitment" by the O.E.M. and Ford was moving away from the FE series anyway, and as stated the BOSS 429 though good on the long tracks wasn't so good otherwise, the rules still stipulated a maximum of 430 cubic inches so it was thought that something was needed in this capacity range; hence the development effort put forth on the canted-valve 385 series engine.

      But just as things got started, by 1970/71, NASCAR enacted a handicap break at the 366 cubic inch size with the intention of forcing the teams to smaller cubic inch engines (slow the cars down) and this pretty much ended the canted-valve 385 engines' competitiveness (not so sure because it was a "Turd"!  ::)).  And with Bud Moore moving over from Trans-Am racing to the NASCAR scene, he brought with him the experience gained with the BOSS 302's, but enlarged into the 335 series 351C (don't know about the 400's, but then there's a lot that I don't know about ???, heck, ask anybody!); this with the "Australian Block" Cleveland, perhaps (I wasn't there!  :-\) punched out to the 366 rule limit. 

      And so was the end of the "Big-Block" racing era in NASCAR!   :-X

      Scott.

      P.S. Besides, this also happen to please GM as they felt they might be more competitive in the "Small-Block" world!  :o

     

     

98SVT - was 06GT

Quote from: pbf777 on March 13, 2024, 08:04:48 PM......the "Australian Block" Cleveland,
The Aussie connection came about because Ford had sent all the Cleveland tooling down under. It ended up cheaper to have the stuff cast there and shipped here than to make new molds and cast them here. Development didn't stop they created the "pillow block" to get a little more water around the top of the cylinders. The A1, 2 & 3 heads were good but they got surpassed by the Yates heads. https://performanceparts.ford.com/part/M-6049-C3
Previous owner 6S843 - GT350H & 68 GT500 Convert #135.
Mine: GT1 Mustang, 1998 SVT 32V, 1929 Model A Coupe, Wife's: 2004 Tbird
Member since 1975 - priceless

SFM5S000

Times like this is when I really miss Randy Gillis RIP aka gt350hr. He would have known.

~Earl J

crossboss

Quote from: SFM5S000 on March 13, 2024, 09:36:57 PM
Times like this is when I really miss Randy Gillis RIP aka gt350hr. He would have known.

~Earl J



That is where I got the info on the 385 series and the 400 'turds' (Randy's exact words!) experiments. According to Randy, there were de-stroked 400s and some form of the 429 wedge versions also. Eventually, the 351 Cleveland was used.
Past owned Shelby's:
1968 GT-350--Gold
1970 GT-500--#3129--Grabber Orange.
Current lifelong projects:
1969 Mustang Fastback/FOX chassis, 5 speed, 4 wheel discs, with a modern Can-Am 494 (Boss 429), Kaase heads, intake with a 1425 cfm 'B' Autolite Inline carb, ala Trans-Am style
1968/70 Olds 442 W-30

JohnSlack

Quote from: crossboss on March 13, 2024, 09:46:55 PM
Quote from: SFM5S000 on March 13, 2024, 09:36:57 PM
Times like this is when I really miss Randy Gillis RIP aka gt350hr. He would have known.

~Earl J



That is where I got the info on the 385 series and the 400 'turds' (Randy's exact words!) experiments. According to Randy, there were de-stroked 400s and some form of the 429 wedge versions also. Eventually, the 351 Cleveland was used.

Scott is absolutely correct Randy was not impressed with the other "experiments.

pbf777

       I would believe that a 400C engine block as the foundation for a NASCAR 358 or 366 cu. in. intention would have been a poor choice for a number of reasons.   ;)

      If one looks at the basic structure layout it just isn't efficient for the purpose; first, why would one want to have mounted in the chassis an engine that presents a 10.300" (+/-) deck height, with the added weight and creating a higher center of gravity effect when the 9.200" (+/-) deck height of the 351C was already proven to be adequate?   ???

      Then as engineered the main bearing bores are for a 3.00" main bearing application which although does provide greater support with the increased bearing surface area, and as designed with a 4" stroke originally, increases the crank-pin to main journal overlap area resulting in a stronger crankshaft, but I doubt a 4" stroke was an intention for a NASCAR 366/358 engine; and not to mention the bearing/crank surface speed relationship issue.   :o

      Now, I understand that there are "inserts" or "bearing spacers" that could be utilized to reduce the main bearing bores to something more acceptable, but these present problems of their own; and I realize that Ford Motor Co. could have just "tailored" the manufacturing process to provide for this also, but the further the engineering gets from the original design intention the greater the costs become; and this was still the era of things being at least 'somewhat' representative of production stuff.   :)

      And as far as striving for a larger capacity, as initially allotted for in the rules at the time, the 400C isn't really a "Big-Block" either, and wouldn't lend itself well to being blown-out to the 430 cu. in rule limit, not without major reworking!  And why would one even tread down this path as there was already the canted-valve 385 series engine family to draw from which I think it could have been made very competitive, that is if it would have been given the development time and effort necessary to bring this to fruition; and had NASCAR not been in mood to move everyone to the smaller cubic inch engines.  After all, this is basically just a 351C, but bigger!   ;)

      Scott.

       

C5HM

Restrictor plates were introduced in the middle of the 1970 season. Unlike today, where one size plate fits all, in those days plate size varied depending upon displacement and combustion chamber configuration. Hemi big blocks got the smallest plates. Wedge headed big blocks got larger plates and smaller displacement engines got the biggest flow chokers of all. Some teams (for sure the Wood Brothers and Junie Donlavey) did try to run wedge headed 429 engines as a way to game those rules (which were ever changing BTW). Dick Brooks finished second at Talladega one year with a wedge headed 429 IIRC. That was the best finish turned in by that configuration. You cannot view this attachment.