![]() The architecture of the Indy head was designed from the onset with large high-flowing ports in mind. Weighing which approach would better serve those looking to duplicate our effort, the cold reality is our insanely modified castings represented more work and one-off esoteric mods than even we'd ever want to attempt again, much less pay for. We had scores of hours of porting time in our low-port MP heads, and achieved respectable flow, but the new Indy heads offered something our highly modified castings couldn't match-power and performance right out of the box. The stock exhaust location eliminates potential complications in fitting existing header designs in most applications, but what really got our attention was the EZ performance potential. The 440-EZ series is based upon the popular Indy SR series of heads, but with casting revisions to the intake, and a relocated exhaust port, putting the exhaust back to the stock location from the raised SR position. When we saw the new Indy 440-EZ heads at the recent trade shows, we began to rethink the practicality of our original approach. in seeking to make these basic castings fit our requirements, the heads were radically ported, including filling in the pushrod pinch and cutting the as-cast intake ports to the maximum cross-sectional area. ![]() We had planned on a set of extensively modified MP 383/440 replacement heads. ![]() Our cylinder head criteria was to use aftermarket aluminum heads with relatively large Max Wedge ports, and we sought very high flow. With our robust short-block built, fitting the top-end package marked the home stretch for our build-up. Sometimes for one reason or another, projects can take a turn midstream, and in the case of our 446 build, timing and circumstance have led to just that. ![]()
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January 2023
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