Was Merc using f/t pistons in 1977 or full dished pistons?I have a 1977 Mercruiser 250hp engine and was curious what the compression ratio is. I have seen anything from 8.7:1 to 9.4:1 I have search all over to no avail. Serial number falls between 4768000_4908849
Certain profile camshafts require a certain amout of compression for them to work at peak efficiency.
Ayuh,... That's correct,... So, leave the cam alone....
A Loppy cam, in an otherwise dead stock motor, will Never work anywhere near peak efficiency.....
This motor is going in an old chevy truck, so the cam that's in there won't work. Yes the bottom end is stock but it already has flat top pistons, almost all of GM's stock motors had dished pistons, so I'm already at an advantage. The heads are being redone, Edelbrock intake and carb and headers. I was just curious on what the compression ratio might be so I can get a camshaft that best matches the motor.
From what I can tell its the original cam. From the research I've done it seems people don't recommended a marine cam in auto applications and vise versa. Ill Mic the cam to see about how much lift it is
Ayuh,... A Marine cam, 'n a Truck, or R/V cam is darn near Exactly the same....
It's the Loopy automotive cams that quite literally Suck, when run in a boat...
You'll want to know more than just lift. You'll want to degree this and check the duration and separation also.Ill Mic the cam to see about how much lift it is