Re: Addendum
Jerry, I have a 427/450 coupe and had the engine rebuilt a number of years ago with a factory clone type cam (11:0 to 1:00 compression ratio). I change the oil twice a year. In the winter months (Long Island NY) I run a 10-40W grade oil and once the weather starts to warm up (like now) I switch over to a 20-50W grade. I have in the past used synthetic oils but given how much expensive they are and the fact that I change the oil twice a year I decided to stay with conventional oils. Also, comments on the DB concering synthetic vs. non-synthetic oils appear to lean towards the use of non-synthetics. As for the type of gas, in the hotter summer months I mix 5 gallons of racing fuel (111 octane) with 15 gallons of Texaco 92 octane. In the winter, with the colder weather, I'll mix 2.5 gallons of racing fuel with the Texaco pump gas. This has worked for me and the car runs fine. I do not use any fuel and/or oil additives as you usually can't tell what's in this stuff.
Jerry, I have a 427/450 coupe and had the engine rebuilt a number of years ago with a factory clone type cam (11:0 to 1:00 compression ratio). I change the oil twice a year. In the winter months (Long Island NY) I run a 10-40W grade oil and once the weather starts to warm up (like now) I switch over to a 20-50W grade. I have in the past used synthetic oils but given how much expensive they are and the fact that I change the oil twice a year I decided to stay with conventional oils. Also, comments on the DB concering synthetic vs. non-synthetic oils appear to lean towards the use of non-synthetics. As for the type of gas, in the hotter summer months I mix 5 gallons of racing fuel (111 octane) with 15 gallons of Texaco 92 octane. In the winter, with the colder weather, I'll mix 2.5 gallons of racing fuel with the Texaco pump gas. This has worked for me and the car runs fine. I do not use any fuel and/or oil additives as you usually can't tell what's in this stuff.
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