Despite having similar displacements, the small-block Chevy 383 and the big-block Mopar 383 have some interesting differences ...
In the late 1950s, Chrysler decided to cease production on its FirePower V8 engines. These were massive, hemispherical engines that would be revived in the mid-1960s and be rebranded to what we now ...
For too many years, the Mopar 383 has been ignored by car crafters blinded by the extra cubes of its cousin, the 440 wedge. It's a shame because back in the golden age of the muscle car, hundreds of ...
Straight off the bat, it's the engine sizes. The Mopar 383 V8 displaces 383 cubic inches (6.3 liters), sitting between the 340 (5.6 liters) and 440 (7.2 liters). The 340, 383, and 440 all are part of ...
Welcome back to Engine Masters, presented by Amsoil, we're here with our first head-to-head shootout: Mopar versus Chevy! While the Mopar 383 big-block served as the workhorse performance engine of ...
It’s our first head-to-head shootout with two engines: a Blueprint Engines crate Chevy 383 small-block versus a hand-built Mopar 383 by Engine Masters host Steve Dulcich. To make this a fair test, we ...
The second generation of the Plymouth Barracuda ‘pony’ car hit the market in 1966 as a 1967 model and went into retirement at the end of the 1969 production year. Three short years, overlapping ...
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10 Greatest Mopar engines from the muscle car boom
The muscle car era was a golden age for automotive enthusiasts, marked by a remarkable array of powerful engines produced by Mopar. Dodge, Plymouth, and Chrysler vehicles of the time were equipped ...
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