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Whats the advantage of low compression?

Discussion in 'Flat Fender Tech' started by Gwillys, Feb 13, 2006.

  1. Gwillys

    Gwillys 1953 CJ3B

  2. 66cj5

    66cj5 Jeep with no name

    different grade(s) of gas? [like 87 vs. 93]
     
  3. M38a1diesel

    M38a1diesel Member

    What he said.

    Weren't the higher compression engines designed for high alititude operation?
     
  4. m38willys

    m38willys Jeep Vice 2024 Sponsor

    Easier to start by hand as well. The MB could be hand cranked if need be.
     
  5. jd7

    jd7 Sponsor

    In their origins higher octane fuels weren't available. These ratios were the standard in the industry until the fifties.
     
  6. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    Lower compression means less power, so there's a price paid for being able to run low octane gas. Both 6.9:1 and 7.4:1 are way low by modern standards.
     
  7. Mcruff

    Mcruff Earlycj5 Machinist

    Engines that have lower compression will idle slower (much slower) and lug down to a slower rpm before stalling.
     
  8. mb82

    mb82 I feel great!

    And the best one... You can force more air in before detonation occures with a supercharger/turbo/NOS :D

    Everyone else is right though. I just wanted to say that.
     
  9. Steamer

    Steamer Thick and gritty!

    This is an interesting conversation. Now, I'm wondering how I tell which motor I have. In the day, were the 7.4 motors considered "high" compression? I remember Dad talking about compression braking differences (not necessarily between these two motors), and lugging capacity. I also remember that up until I turned my rig over to a rebuilder (who muffed a few little items) I had a high altitude carb needle hanging by a wire off the carb. Got lost, somewhere. Short of a teardown, any info on bore / stroke combos, or combustion chamber volume? I guess I just answered that question, but still, any way to tell?
     
  10. w3srl

    w3srl All-around swell dude Staff Member

    7.4 (if you mean the 454 Chevy) engines were all low-compression (less than 10.0 to 1) after 1970 due to EPA regs at the time. the 396, 402 and 427 big-blocks were all high-compression engines of 10.0 to 1 or higher, but they were phased out by late 1970.

    In fact most, if not all US cars dropped to 9.0 to 1 or lower for 1971.
     
  11. electricontr

    electricontr Member

    I think he means 7.4 to 1 compression ratio...not engine displacement
     
  12. w3srl

    w3srl All-around swell dude Staff Member

  13. 181jeep

    181jeep Banned

    i believe he was referring to an f134 with 7.4 to 1 compression ratio.

    JB
     
  14. nickmil

    nickmil In mothballs.

    On the older vehicles it was for all the reasons mentioned plus the fact you could get them to run on whatever was available during war time. On late model cars the reason for lower compression ratio is to reduce NOx or nitrogen oxides, a green house gas caused by high combustion temperatures. That was the real reason for the demise of many muscle cars in the early 70's. Nickmil.
     
  15. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    Just bein' picky... NOx (a collection of the common oxides of nitrogen) is now thought of as a "greenhouse gas" but was targeted initially because it is a major component of photochemical smog. If you've spent time in the LA area in the summer, the brown haze in the atmosphere is due to nitrogen dioxide, one of the NOx compounds. As smog, it's really nasty - in the 70s, when the smog was bad in LA, you could not inhale deeply on hot summer afternoons without coughing. The whole notion of "greenhouse gases" didn't come about until well after the demise of the muscle cars, and usually refers to carbon dioxide (CO2) which was previously thought to be a benign product of combustion.
     
  16. nickmil

    nickmil In mothballs.

    Yer absolutely correct. Just didn't want to get that far into it. Nickmil.