depends on what year it is, if it's been built for performance, kind of heads....lots of different compressions. usually for an early built engine somewhere in the ballpark of 8.5/1 up to 10.5/1. good luck with that!
To convert 350 degrees Fahrenheit to Celsius, subtract 32 from 350 and then multiply by 5/9. Therefore, 350°F is approximately 176.67°C.
350 degrees Fahrenheit is approximately 176.67 degrees Celsius.
350 degrees Celsius = 662 degrees Fahrenheit
350 degrees Fahrenheit is 176.67 degrees Celsius.
350 degrees Fahrenheit = 176.67 degrees Celsius or 449.82 Kelvin.
Compression ratio on a 1974 Chevy 350 in a Nova was 8.5:1.
8.5 to 1 compression is factory stock.
The compression ratio of a 350 Chevy engine usually ranges from 8.0 and 9.0 to 1. This provides a good balance of fuel economy and power.
A 260 what, on a 350 what, might help us answer that.
Not a good idea. 350 heads will lower compression to 7 to 1 or less.
About 8.5 to 1
10.25:1
8:1.
10.5-1
then youre running about 8.5:1 compression
compression
8.5:1