I’m putting together a 355ci small block Chevy and I’m in the planning stages. I was wondering, what are some of the ways to juggle compression ratio? Everybody always tells you to run 9:1 but I think this engine would make a little more power with perhaps 10:1 compression. I know I can get close with a combination of piston top and a small chamber but are there other ways to dial-in the compression?

B.C.

Compression ratio is the big equalizer for power. The reason for selecting a compression ratio is more about how much you are willing to spend for the octane rating for this street engine. With a 9:1 ratio, you might get away with 87 octane fuel. But a higher compression ratio like 10:1 or 10.5:1 will deliver more torque, more horsepower, a much crisper throttle response, and better fuel mileage. So it’s worth the effort to build that into your next engine.

If you pay attention to modern engine design, you may have noticed that compression ratios are on the rise. The OE’s have figured out how to improve power by increasing compression while still allowing the engine to run on 91 octane premium. With current direct injection engines like GM’s LT1, this engine now enjoys an honest 11.5:1 compression ratio designed to run on 91 octane pump gasoline.

This is because now the fuel is injected directly into the combustion chamber which ensures an ideal air-fuel ratio. Plus, GM’s engineers have figured out how to design a combustion space that will optimize power yet minimize detonation. Of course, they benefit from detonation sensors that immediately retard timing if detonation is detected, which keeps the engine away from the harmful effects of uncontrolled combustion.

This is an LT1 direct injection chamber. Note that the injector is directly across from the spark plug. This is on purpose. The piston has a small pre-chamber mixing bowl to help get the combustion started. (Image/GM)

Yet even with a simple carbureted engine, you can still have the power from higher compression without the harmful effects of detonation as long as the engine builder is careful with his parts selection and equally diligent with engine assembly. Compression is a great way to improve performance while not hurting efficiency.

But there are also pitfalls you must avoid.

One of the best places to focus on is piston-to-head clearance (or what some call squish or quench). This is defined as the distance from the piston to the cylinder head. Most production two-valve pushrod engines today feature wedge style combustion chambers instead of the hemispherical design. A hemispherical combustion chamber enjoys certain airflow benefits but even Chrysler realized that, with their new Gen. III Hemi, it needed quench areas in order to improve combustion efficiency.

If you look carefully at this Chrysler Gen. III Hemi chamber, you will see opposing quench areas (arrows). This makes the Gen III Hemi really a hybrid—part hemi and part wedge. But it works. Chrysler found that they needed two spark plugs per chamber to help reduce the unburned hydrocarbon emissions because of the wide chamber and large surface area. These engines, even with stock cylinder heads, make outstanding power. (Image/Jeff Smith)

The quench area on a typical wedge head is the flat portion adjacent to the combustion chamber that is exposed to the cylinder. This flat portion is designed to match a flat portion on the piston. As the piston approaches Top Dead Center (TDC), these two surfaces come very close together—generally less than 0.050 inch. With the piston near TDC, this tight space squishes the air and fuel, and squirts it into the combustion chamber causing increased turbulence which thoroughly mixes the air and fuel for improved combustion.

The tighter the engine builder can maintain this quench space, the more turbulence is created which dramatically improves combustion. The consensus opinion is that a tight quench can assist marginally high static compression ratios to minimize detonation since less timing is needed to make the same, or more, power.

For street wedge engines with steel connecting rods, a tight piston-to-head clearance is generally acknowledged at 0.040 inch. However, there are combinations where this can be tighter perhaps as close as 0.035 inch. Much of this depends on piston rock, which occurs across TDC as the piston changes direction. Piston rock is affected mainly by skirt design and piston-to-cylinder wall clearance. The looser the piston-to-wall clearance, the more the piston will rock and the wider the quench distance will need to be to prevent the piston from hitting the head.  

This is our long-way-around way to answer your question.

As an engine builder, it comes down to playing with the existing piston-to-deck clearance. Let’s look at a small block Chevy example. Let’s say we’re assembling a 355ci engine and we measure 0.010 inch of clearance between the top of the piston and the deck surface.

If we are shooting for a 0.038 inch quench clearance, then we would ideally need a 0.028 inch head gasket. The typical compressed thickness for a composition gasket is around 0.041 inch which is too thick. We could have the block milled to a near zero deck height. That would be one solution.

An alternative would be an MLS (multi-layer steel) cylinder head gasket which is available from many good companies like Fel-Pro, Victor-Reinz, and Cometic. Most only offer a couple of different gasket thicknesses but Cometic offers a wide selection of thicknesses. We looked into their catalog and chose a lineup of SBC gaskets at a 4.100 inch bore diameter. We looked these up at SummitRacing.com and found over 20 head gaskets spanning a thickness range from 0.023 to 0.120 inch. This is an amazing range of gasket thicknesses, allowing the engine builder a variety of options.

Let change this scenario to an LS engine where the piston protrudes from the deck by 0.008 inch. In the old days with only a 0.041 inch gasket, this would make the piston-to-head very tight and perhaps require perhaps custom machining to the pistons. But today, we could just spec a 0.051 inch head gasket and we’d be right in the ballpark. Plus this moves the piston rings closer to the top of the bore and might improve performance slightly.

Cometic offers these same gasket thicknesses over a wide variety of engines—not just for small block Chevy or LS engines. This is just another example of how manufacturers are making it much easier to build the engine you desire. You just have to know where to look!

This is what happens if you get the piston-to-head clearance a little bit too tight. These are hypereutectic pistons and we did not check the dome-to-chamber clearance and one piston hit the chamber. We were lucky. If it had been any tighter, the contact would have broken this cast piston. (Image/Jeff Smith)
Author: Jeff Smith

Jeff Smith has had a passion for cars since he began working at his grandfather's gas station at the age 10. After graduating from Iowa State University with a journalism degree in 1978, he combined his two passions: cars and writing. Smith began writing for Car Craft magazine in 1979 and became editor in 1984. In 1987, he assumed the role of editor for Hot Rod magazine before returning to his first love of writing technical stories. Since 2003, Jeff has held various positions at Car Craft (including editor), has written books on small block Chevy performance, and even cultivated an impressive collection of 1965 and 1966 Chevelles. Now he serves as a regular contributor to OnAllCylinders.