It was in the Impala/Caprice, later Chevelle's, and pick up trucks. It was considered a high torque motor. Not high performance.
Yes.
NO. Not even close.
chevy 350
From the front of the motor, clockwise.
A small block. It is the first motor squared, by Chevy, meaning it has a 4 inch bore, and 4 inch stroke.
this is a mess of a question and the answer is NO. why? because there was never a big block 350 made by Chevrolet and as far as a short block 350 on the transmission? who cares rather the motor had heads or not (i.e. short block= crate motor sold without heads). if you asked me if a big block Chevy will bolt up to a transmission that came in a vehicle with a small block i would say yes.
Chevy built a 302 in the late sixties. It used a 327 block with a 283 crank.
That would be a destroked motor, and would result in a 285.
Headers depend on the motor size, and the vehicle, as they have to fit the chassis, as well. Hooker, Doug Thorley, Blackjack, Headman, are some of your companies. Contact them.
no completely different motor
on the left lower side of the engine block
block hugger headers