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The Amazing Mopar (Dodge/Plymouth) 340 V8 Engine
Chrysler's 340 cubic inch V8 was one of the best engines of the 1960s and 1970s for performance enthusiasts. It had high-flow heads, big ports, a two-level intake manifold, and a six-barrel option (three two-barrel carbs). The engine combined high power and relatively light weight, a fine combination in the Plymouth Duster and Road Runner.
The design was guided by Tom Hoover, later known as "father of the Hemi;" based on engine analyses, he set the bore size at 4.04", though the cylinders were just 4.46" apart. The valves were as large as possible, which meant moving the spark plugs ever so slightly (0.08") further out.
When the 340 came out in late 1967, it was a street fighter from the start. Separating the 340 from the standard-performance 318 were not just 22 cubic inches, but also:
The 340's initial power rating was 275 horsepower, gross. Ed Poplawski wrote, though,
From Plymouth dealer book - gross horsepower, torque listed.
1970-71 engines were painted orange; they changed to blue very late in the 1971 model year; the camshaft on automatics had a 268° intake and 276° exhaust opening duration, with 44° overlap (manuals had 276° intake, 284° exhaust, 52° overlap). Valve lift was 0.430" intake, and 0.445" exhaust. The 10.3:1 compression ratio (according to 1971 brochures) was far above the 318's 8.8 and the 360's 8.7.
A six-barrel version (with three two-barrel carburetors) brought higher-performance heads, new valve covers, and material added to the bulkheads to allow for four-bolt main bearing caps. This one used an unsilenced air cleaner, rather than the dual-snorkel one used in the four-barrel; it was only sold in the Plymouth AAR 'Cuda and Dodge Challenger T/A.
For the 1971 cars, the 340 (and the 360) came with the "J" type heads, using a single casting, with different machining for the different sized valves. 360 heads were used in the 1970 340 Six-Pack AAR/TA, which had the same size valves.
Chrysler's 340 cubic inch V8 was one of the best engines of the 1960s and 1970s for performance enthusiasts. It had high-flow heads, big ports, a two-level intake manifold, and a six-barrel option (three two-barrel carbs). The engine combined high power and relatively light weight, a fine combination in the Plymouth Duster and Road Runner.
The design was guided by Tom Hoover, later known as "father of the Hemi;" based on engine analyses, he set the bore size at 4.04", though the cylinders were just 4.46" apart. The valves were as large as possible, which meant moving the spark plugs ever so slightly (0.08") further out.
When the 340 came out in late 1967, it was a street fighter from the start. Separating the 340 from the standard-performance 318 were not just 22 cubic inches, but also:
- a dual timing chain with a windage tray to improve top end engine RPM by keeping the crank counter weights from churning the oil in the pan.
- Big 2.02 inch intake valves and 1.60 inch exhaust valves, vs the 318's 1.78 intake and 1.50 exhaust
- a high-rise dual plane intake
- larger exhaust manifolds
- a viscous fan drive to cut power loss at high speeds
- an 850 cfm carburetor (from 1971 to 1973)
- a forged steel crank (through 1972's engine #39118000, when a cast iron crank was used)
- high-performance heads
- thicker bulkheads and higher main bearing caps to strengthen the bottom end
- stronger connecting rods
- a revised oil pump with a 90 degree adaptor
- a special carburetor and cam
The 340's initial power rating was 275 horsepower, gross. Ed Poplawski wrote, though,
I did some of the original dyno development on the 340; the four-barrel 340, running under lab gross conditions (no air cleaner, deep sump pan, max spark and F/A, cold intake manifold, no accessories, and lab exhaust) would make in the range of 320 to 330 horsepower at 6000 rpm. The advertised 275 hp was for NHRA Stock classification, to make it more competitive.
1968 specs | 1968 318 V8 (Valiant) | 1968 340 V8 |
---|---|---|
Carburetor type | 2-bbl. | Carter AVS 4-bbl |
Horsepower | 230 @ 4400 rpm | 275 @ 5000 rpm |
Torque, lbs.-ft. | 340 @ 2400 rpm | 340 @ 3200 rpm |
Compression ratio | 9.2 to 1 | 10.5 to 1 |
Bore x Stroke | 3.91 x 3.31 | 4.04 x 3.31 |
Fuel | Regular | Premium |
1970-71 engines were painted orange; they changed to blue very late in the 1971 model year; the camshaft on automatics had a 268° intake and 276° exhaust opening duration, with 44° overlap (manuals had 276° intake, 284° exhaust, 52° overlap). Valve lift was 0.430" intake, and 0.445" exhaust. The 10.3:1 compression ratio (according to 1971 brochures) was far above the 318's 8.8 and the 360's 8.7.
A six-barrel version (with three two-barrel carburetors) brought higher-performance heads, new valve covers, and material added to the bulkheads to allow for four-bolt main bearing caps. This one used an unsilenced air cleaner, rather than the dual-snorkel one used in the four-barrel; it was only sold in the Plymouth AAR 'Cuda and Dodge Challenger T/A.
For the 1971 cars, the 340 (and the 360) came with the "J" type heads, using a single casting, with different machining for the different sized valves. 360 heads were used in the 1970 340 Six-Pack AAR/TA, which had the same size valves.
1971 specs | Four-barrel | 3 x Two-barrel |
---|---|---|
Gross Horsepower | 275 @ 5000 rpm | 290 @ 5,000 |
Net Horsepower | 235 @ 4,400 | 250 @ 4,800 |
Torque, lbs.-ft. | 340 @ 3200 | 345 @ 3,400 |
Net (SAE) torque | 305 @ 2,800* 310 @ 3200* | 325 @ 3,400 |
Cam intake, exhaust, overlap | 268° - 276° - 44° |