Hemi killer:
Ford Boss 429ci V8 Engine
Bid for the chance to own a Ford Boss 429ci V8 Engine at auction with Bring a Trailer, the home of the best vintage and classic cars online. Lot #100,810.
bringatrailer.com
They were under rated, I believe 385hp from factory. They only came in one production vehicle - Mustang Boss 429. The rest of these motors went into Stock Cars for NASCAR. Many stories about the Boss 429s being dogs out of the dealership, poor running and slow. They were not installed at the Ford assembly plant but Kar Kraft which had to alter the shock towers to make the motor fit into the mustang. The stories are once the Boss 429 was dialed in and running proper they would beat Hemi cars on the street- possibly due to the lighter weight of the mustang compared to the dodges. The Boss 429 is considered the fastest muscle car ever made of that generation.Neat, what was the HP and application for these? Nasty idle and spitting flames.
I have some literature at home, from when gramps worked for Ford. Has some good info on 429 Boss. And you know what's crazy, quickest Mustang of the late 60s early 70s was the 71 Boss 351.They were under rated, I believe 385hp from factory. They only came in one production vehicle - Mustang Boss 429. The rest of these motors went into Stock Cars for NASCAR. Many stories about the Boss 429s being dogs out of the dealership, poor running and slow. They were not installed at the Ford assembly plant but Kar Kraft which had to alter the shock towers to make the motor fit into the mustang. The stories are once the Boss 429 was dialed in and running proper they would beat Hemi cars on the street- possibly due to the lighter weight of the mustang compared to the dodges. The Boss 429 is considered the fastest muscle car ever made of that generation.
A hemi killer that wasn't much to brag about on the streets according to some. Interesting.Hemi killer:
A hemi killer that wasn't much to brag about on the streets according to some. Interesting.
There were two 429s put in Cougars, one each for Eddie Schartman and Don Nicholson. They weren't production cars though.
And I'm curious as to the headers also...
Supposedly so.I always heard the 440 was actually a better street motor than the Hemi. Any truth to that?
My dad knew some people back in the day that worked / owned a dealership and said the same thing about the 440.Like mentioned, it needed some tuning straight off the lot.
I always heard the 440 was actually a better street motor than the Hemi. Any truth to that?
It's odd that they both veer off to the rightI wonder if those headers were for a marine/boat application
Sent from my iPhone using the svtperformance.com mobile app
Isn't this why the Boss 429 was not a great street engine and why the 428 Cobra Jet was much more preferred on the street?Under 5,000 rpm the 440 was a much better performer, which so happens to be the majority of street driving. Get the rev's over 5K and the Hemi would start pulling away. The 440 had a LOT more bottom end torque while the Hemi needed a lot more gear in the rear to get going.
The 440 had cylinder heads that were more suited for a healthy small block, thus the big low rpm torque numbers, and lack of high rpm power, while the Hemi's huge heads needed rpm to start taking advantage of all of that extra flow potential.
Very cool piece of Ford history.
My dream build will be a ‘69 Boss 429 tribute with a 600” Ford ‘semi-hemi’.
And those magnesium covers…
-J