In the long history of the Gen I small block Chevy, there are a couple of high-water marks most everyone knows about. The first was the 375 horsepower, fuel injected 327 found in the 1964 Corvette. The second and more highly sought after small block is the 1970 350ci LT1 engine used in the Corvette and Camaro.
The LT1 came from the factory with 11:1 compression, a solid lifter camshaft, iron cylinder heads, and a 750 cfm Holley carburetor on an aluminum dual plane intake manifold. The LT1 was rated at 370 horsepower in the Corvette and 360 horsepower in the Camaro. Can’t be upstaging our halo car, can we?
We thought it might be fun to build a small block that would visually replicate an LT1 while adding some modern muscle. We settled on doing a 383ci stroker.
Story Overview
- Jeff Smith shows you how to build a 383ci small block Chevy stroker engine that looks like a 1970-vintage LT1 350
- This engine is the first stage of a two-stage build. Stage II will have Trick Flow cylinder heads, a roller camshaft, and other big power upgrades
- Learn why aligning the lifter bores with the camshaft tunnel can reduce cam wear
- See a complete parts list for this engine build
This build was done in two stages. Stage 1 used factory LT1 external parts, a forged rotating assembly, and a replica of the LT1 mechanical camshaft. Stage II would dispense with the LT1 disguise and add Trick Flow DHS200 aluminum heads, a Summit Racing Pro hydraulic roller camshaft with the GM LS firing order, and a single plane intake manifold in the quest for big horsepower.
We got Summit Racing to join us in this little engine conspiracy. They supplied the rotating assembly, cams and valvetrain, and other parts needed to build the 383. Our long-time pal Chuck Hanson in Tennessee helped us dredge up a set of 1971 #492 cylinder head castings along with the proper aluminum intake manifold, valve covers, distributor, and Holley carburetor for the Stage 1 build.
Oops, Wrong Block
Right off, we have to confess that we muffed the plan a bit. Our friend Ron Flood, owner of Cedar Machine, had a block for sale that appeared to fit our requirements. He had fully machined this block by align honing the mains; boring the cam galley to make the camshaft parallel with the mains; adding larger 0.875-inch lifter bore bushings; and blueprinting the block to GM specs.
All that looked great, so we bought the block—only to discover that it was a later two-piece rear main seal casting with the passenger side dipstick. The proper block for an LT1 would have a driver side dipstick. We were too far along to go looking for another block, so we used the one we had.
Rotating Assembly
The rotating assembly features a 3.75-inch stroke Summit Racing 4340 forged steel crank, a set of 6.00-inch Summit Racing H-beam connecting rods, and Summit Racing 2618 alloy forged pistons. The piston has what amounts to a 9cc dish that will work with the 64cc iron heads as well as the TFS DHC heads we plan to test in the Stage II build. The compression with these pistons and heads comes out to right at 10.5:1, which should be just on the safe side with 91 pump gas.
The first order of business was to establish operating clearances for the rod and main bearings along with checking the crankshaft endplay. Using Clevite coated bearings, the rod and main clearances all came in around 0.0025-inch with some minor variations. The crank endplay measured 0.004-inch.
Short Block Assembly
Before we assembled the engine, we wanted to ensure that there was sufficient piston-to-valve clearance with the Summit Racing roller cam we’re using in the Stage II build. We installed a piston in cylinder Number One, the roller cam, and a cylinder head with checking springs. We used the dial indicator to accurately measure the clearance at 10 degrees before and after Top Dead Center where clearances are the tightest. With 0.140-inch or more of clearance on both valves, we won’t have any clearance issues.
After final washing the block and rotating assembly parts, we started putting the engine together. We installed a Summit Racing GPX ring package on the pistons, then slid the piston/rod assemblies into the cylinder bores using a Summit Racing tapered ring compressor and hand pressure. With all eight pistons in place, we used our ARP rod bolt stretch gauge to set bolt stretch to the ARP spec of 0.0050-inch.
Normally we would have installed the camshaft before the rotating assembly to ensure there was no binding on the cam bearings. Since we had already used the Summit Racing roller cam to check piston-to-valve clearance and found no bearing issues, we slid the Summit Racing LT1 muscle car cam in the block.
Why Bigger Lifter Bores?
Since the block was machined for larger diameter 0.875-inch lifters, we used—dare we say it—Ford hydraulic flat tappet lifters.
Here’s why: Factory blocks often have lifter bores that are not properly aligned to the camshaft tunnel. This is usually due to machining errors or core shift during the casting process. The misalignment will not allow the lifters to rotate, which leads to excessive lifter and cam lobe wear or outright failure.
That was the case with our block. Cedar Machine fixed the issue by enlarging the lifter bores and insert bushings to accommodate the Ford lifters. You can bush the bores to use standard 0.842-inch Chevy lifters, but using the larger Ford lifters puts a little more lifter face on the cam lobe. That reduces unit loading pressure on the lifter and camshaft, reducing wear.
There’s no real performance advantage to going with the larger lifter diameter for flat tappet cams—we did it for durability reasons.
The Rest
While checking oil pump to oil pan clearance, we discovered the windage tray we planned to use would not work with the stock pan. So, we went without it.
We pre-assembled the #492 iron cylinder heads with new guides, valves, factory-style valve springs, and seals. We also had a valve job performed. We sacrificed a tiny bit of authenticity by using ARP head bolts in place of factory-appearing bolts. We’ve had problems in the past with minimal factory head bolt thread overlap in older blocks and didn’t want to pull any threads out of our block. We won’t have that issue with the ARPs.
The rocker arms are 1.6 ratio COMP Cams Pro Magnum rollers. The chromoly rocker arms have less mass in non-critical areas and more beef in areas that take the most punishment. That makes the rockers five percent lighter at the valve than comparable aluminum rockers.
With the heads torqued and sealed, we bolted on the factory dual-plane intake manifold. Some mild tweaking was required to make it fit correctly. We also converted an original LT1 distributor over to a Pertronix kit to eliminate the old-school points.
We filled the 383 with five quarts of Driven Racing BR30 break-in oil and used our ancient but trustworthy engine priming tool to pressure lube the engine. We set the harmonic balancer to 15 degrees Before Top Dead Center for the 383’s initial timing, then dropped the distributor in place and tightened it down.
We bolted an original OEM Holley 780 CFM carb on the engine for the photos of our small-block subterfuge. We used a 750 CFM Holley 3310 carburetor for testing. After a quick session on our Summit test stand to ensure the engine was ready for the dyno, we headed out to our local facility in Waterloo, Iowa.
In Part 2 of our story, we’ll dyno the Stage I build, then do our Stage II upgrades and dyno that combination. Stick with us–it’s going to be fun!
Stage I Short Block Parts List
Summit Racing™ Forged Crankshaft SUM-SBC35037502P
Summit Racing™ Performance SBC Forged H-Beam Connecting Rods SUM-SBC60002H
Summit Racing™ Forged Pro Pistons SUM-SBC383030L
Summit Racing™ Pro GPX Gas Ported Piston Rings SUM-GP403012
Clevite H-Series Coated Main Bearings CLE-MS909HC
Clevite H-Series Coated Rod Bearings, standard CLE-CB663HNC
Melling Shark Tooth Oil Pump, high pressure/standard volume MEL-10553ST
Dorman Replacement Oil Pan, passenger side dipstick RNB-264103
ARP Main Stud Kit ARP-234-5610
ARP Oil Pump Stud ARP-230-7003
Fel-Pro Performance Rear Main Seal FEL-2912
Fel-Pro Performance Oil Pan Gasket FEL-1880
Summit Racing™ Freeze Plug Kit SUM-1581
Stage I Camshaft and Valvetrain Parts List
Summit Racing™ Muscle Car Replacement Cam, LT1 SUM-1124
COMP Cams High Energy Hydraulic Lifters for Ford CCA-832-16
Melling Double Roller Timing Set MEL-40400
COMP Cams Pro Magnum Roller Rocker Arms CCA-1605-8
COMP Cams Magnum Pushrods, 5/16″/7.800″ CCA-7372-16
ARP High Performance Cylinder Head Bolts ARP-134-3601
Fel-Pro Performance MLS Head Gaskets FEL-1142
Stage I External Accessories Parts List
Carter Muscle Car Mechanical Fuel Pump CRT-M6624
Summit Racing™ OEM Style Harmonic Balancer SUM-161358
Summit Racing™ Harmonic Balancer Bolt SUM-G1677
Dayco Mechanical Water Pump DAC-DP1003
Summit Racing™ Crank Pulley, 2-groove SUM-G3957B
Goodmark Alternator Bracket GMK-4012285691S
Classic Performance Water Pump Pulley, 2-groove CLP-CP38813
Auto Metal Direct Air Cleaner Assembly AMD-W-460
Stage I Misc. Parts List
Fel-Pro R.A.C.E Gasket Set FEL-2702
Fel-Pro Performance Intake Gaskets FEL-1266
Fel-Pro Water Neck Gasket FEL-2202
Fel-Pro Performance Header Gaskets FEL-1405
ARP Fuel Pump Pushrod ARP-134-8701
Pertronix Ignitor II Solid State Ignition Conversion PNX-91181
Summit Racing™ Oil Filter Adapter SES-3-60-08-900
Driven Racing GP-1 Break-In Oil, 6 quarts JGR-19336-6
Driven Racing GP-1 10W30 Engine Oil, 6 quarts JGR-19306-6











Advertised Duration: 295°/308°
Duration at .050″ Lift: 242°/254°
Lift with 1.5 Rocker Arm: .459″/.485″
Lobe Separation: 116°
Valve Lash: .020″/.025″





hi im runing a 383 stroker motor steel crank with a 350 tran my question my camaro 69 finished build my are no big 225 60 r 15 rear end is 8.2 411 i have a 3000 torc converter my heads are .550 lift please help me want something enjoy my 69 not the gas station something in between thank you for your help