Re: 383 dyno success!
Not sure of the dry weight. Tried to find specs online but no luck. It's a 21' open bow. To get an idea of size, scroll down to "Boat of the Month".
http://www.indycovers.com/
I had the cover made in May...back when I thought the boat would be done by Memorial Weekend, Ha.
My set up involves AFR 195 heads, RPM Air Gap intake, Eagle 383 rotating assembly with cast crank, stock two bolt mains with ARP studs, full roller rockers, short valve covers (barely clear rocker retainers with thicker cork gaskets), Holley 750 with vac. secondaries, and custom ground roller cam 214/218. There is nothing trick to this set-up just components that work well together. My goal was to keep this affordable compared to performance marine engines I've seen on the net. Even after buying the aftermarket ignition, I think I am getting great bang for the buck (minus future outdrive).
I think one thing that helped the low end is that I really paid attention to valvetrain geometry. Based on what I've seen online, I would guess that I measured my pushrods different than how most people would have done it (based on true lift vs. being overly concerned about the roller being in the middle of the valve stem). If I would have centered the roller on the stem, I would have gotten .3" of actual lift. I adjusted it until I got .53" of max lift which is exactly what the cam and rocker combination was set up to provide.
The Holley was spot on for A/F ratio right out of the box. All we did was adjust the idle. The MSD billet distributor was head and shoulders better than the TB V as it allowed us to go to valve float 5800-5900 rpm. I don't plan on taking it that high (neat to hear it do it on the dyno though).
I need to input the dyno data from the hard copy I have into Excel. I can then chart out the curves. I've got some video that I will try to download tomorrow.
