If one were going strictly by numbers alone, it would appear the new '54 Fords had the same Flathead V-8 they'd had for decades. The '53 and '54 Fords both offered a 239ci engine, but horsepower seemed to have jumped from 106 to 130. The difference was overhead valves. Ford had initiated the mass-produced Flathead V-8 some 22 years before and made some eight million of 'em, but at the end of the era found itself behind General Motors in the engine technology race, forcing Dearborn to finally jump into the inevitable and produce its first modern OHV V-8s.
If you're thinking of motive power for a new project car or truck and you have Blue Oval blood in your veins, you could easily pick one of a dozen great small-block crate engines from Ford. Or, you could pick from several choices in the Dearborn lineup of historical and cool vintage engines. This time around, we're examining the Y-block engines Ford would use for the immediate post-Flathead decade. They're trim enough to fit well in most street rod applications, can be dressed out quite nicely with goodies available today, and can be tweaked to provide a powerband decent enough to burn up some expensive rear Cokers!
Y-Block HistoryPlanning at Ford for a newer V-8 had been going on since 1948, but the company made hundreds of trial engines for testing and didn't finalize a production version until the Y-block design (so nicknamed because of the deep skirt at the bottom of the block) debuted in 1952 in the Lincoln. The overall company plan was to use overhead-valve technology in all FoMoCo applications, but the new OHV six-cylinder and Lincoln V-8 arrived in dealerships first, then two years later in the Ford line for the masses.
Ford was in heated competition with rivals GM and Chrysler for the whole period of the 1950s and 1960s. It was a time of optimism, consumerism, and a burgeoning American economy. Buyers expected truly "new" car designs almost every year, with more chrome and options, and of course, increasing horsepower to back up the road-yacht image. GM started the horsepower race with the '49 Cadillac OHV Kettering-design 331ci V-8, followed by similar-but-different V-8s from Oldsmobile, Buick, Pontiac, and of course, Chevrolet's distinctively different small-block V-8s. Chrysler had introduced its wildly successful (looking in the rearview mirror with a hot rod perspective) Hemi-headed V-8s beginning in 1951, but as the number two manufacturer out of the three, Ford was most interested in staying ahead of Chevrolet.
The new Y-block in the Ford line was substantially improved in almost every way when compared with the Flathead. The crankshaft was not only supported by the deep skirt of the block, but it had five main bearings, better oiling, and better cooling. From the start, they had the "oversquare" approach, with a bore larger than the stroke (3.50-inch bore and 3.10-inch stroke), but the compression was a weak 7.2:1, and the heads weren't the best for performance, although an enormous improvement over a Flathead in terms of breathing and chamber function.
Ford had only to worry about staying competitive with its three lines of cars-Ford, Mercury, and Lincoln-while GM and Chrysler both had five lines to worry about. In all of the Big Three companies, each line had to be perceived as having its own engines, even if the only difference between the models was that the higher-line cars had more cubic inches in the same engine design. Looking at the '54 Y-block engines, the Ford line started with a 239, the Mercurys had a 256, and the Lincolns continued the 317-incher they introduced in 1952.
For 1957, Ford took its Y-block game to its zenith, with a full lineup of powerplants. The base 272 now sported 190 hp, the 292 came in with 212, and the list of 312 options included a 245hp base four-barrel version and dual-quad models (now in passenger cars) with 270hp and 285hp levels. For the true hot rod gearhead, though, the ultimate T-bird option for 1957 was the 312 with a factory-installed Paxton/McCulloch centrifugal supercharger.
The compression ratio was held back a little to 8.5:1 to allow for 6 pounds of boost, and the blown Y-block still achieved an advertised 300 hp! We can't imagine any esteemed automobile manufacturer would flirt with the truth, but many contemporary observers of track times suggest theses were somewhat underrated. Some made 340 hp or more with a few "adjustments." All this was despite Ford realizing by 1957 that most Thunderbird buyers preferred a comfortable-but-distinctive country-club car over a potential road-race competitor, such as the Corvette. Only a little more than 200 blown 'Birds were sold. We all know the direction Thunderbirds went after that, but to give the Ford planners their due, the bigger and heavier '58 Thunderbirds with back seats sold almost as fast as Ford could produce them.
The Y-block had proven to be a successful powerplant for Ford, but the "bigger is better" handwriting was on the wall at Engineering, and in 1958 a new engine design, in 332ci and 352ci versions, was introduced and sold right alongside models with Y-blocks. We refer to that new engine design today as the great FE series (the subject of a later article in this series), which had the potential to be enlarged to greater displacements over its time in the marketplace, plus other improvements over the Y-block design. Over the next few years, the only passenger-car Y-blocks available were lower-horsepower versions of the 292, which eventually bowed out in 1962 in cars but continued a while after that in truck applications.
From showrooms across the country to heavy-duty trucking to NASCAR and speed records at Daytona Beach, the Y-blocks had proved worthy during their time in the combat-like competition between the automakers of the 1950s. It made a great successor to the venerable Flathead and bravely served "on point" for the legions of later Ford overhead engines to come.
Y-Blocks In Street RodsIn comparison to the two engines previously examined in this series, the Y-block as a candidate for street rod use is more practical and popular than the semi-Hemi Mopars, although less utilized than the 348-409 Chevys. That last fact is one of the reasons you might consider a Ford Y-block for your next project. We've already seen increasing use of Y-blocks in cars featured within these pages, but selecting one of these engines will never categorize your ride as a bellybutton rod by a long shot. Good power, great looks, and decent power-to-weight ratio are all assets of the Y-block engines, and they fit better in most rod compartments than some of the big GM overheads.
Perhaps from their high profile in racing, Y-blocks stirred the imagination of rodders almost from the time they were introduced, so hungry were traditional guys for something Blue Oval to replace the Flathead and compete with the GM powerplants at the drags and street races. Hot Rod magazine and the little books had a number of articles about the Y-blocks, extolling the virtues of the five-main bearings, deep-skirted block, overhead valves, full-flow oiling, quench-type chambers, and a chaindrive camshaft (as opposed to the Flathead's geardrive).
The 1950s was a great period of socioeconomic change and a time when Americans were fascinated with the continuous parade of new technologies in travel, communications, entertainment, labor-saving devices for the homemaker, and of course, new cars every year. The Big Three did not disappoint, with "longer, lower, more powerful" being the bywords of each year's crop of new cars. Younger readers may not comprehend this, but in those heady days, families would surround the local dealerships as soon as the car carriers dropped off a load at intro time, and there were actually crowds at dealerships of every marque. The dads all did their research ahead of time, reading Tom McCahill's automotive columns in Mechanix Illustrated.
Motorsports was part of the process, as the hottest new cars duked it out on NASCAR tracks, when the race cars really were "stock cars." The Rocket 88 Oldsmobiles had their time in the sun for a year or two, then Hudsons ruled with their fast-off-the-corner six-cylinders. Ford was back in the game with the larger versions of its Y-blocks by the mid-1950s. Drivers such as Curtis Turner, Junior Johnson, Parnelli Jones, and Joe Weatherly were cleaning up with dual-quad Y-blocks. Besides all the Y-block wins in the regular races, NASCAR also ran a series from 1956-1959 that was all convertibles, and 26 of the 47 races were in Ford's win column in 1956, 22 of those by Curtis Turner. Chevrolet had introduced its lightweight small-block V-8 in 1955, but the 265 wasn't strong enough for the larger displacement competition. When its 283 V-8 came out in 1957, especially the rare "factory race cars" with the Rochester mechanical fuel injection, Chevrolet proved to be better competition; but Ford still outsold Chevrolet in 1957 on the streets and in the dealerships. In those days, it really was a case of "win on Sunday, sell on Monday."
As the oil companies struggled to come up with higher-octane fuels, the car manufacturers kept raising their compressions ratios to produce more power from the same basic engines. That was one way to escalate the advertised-horsepower stakes. The other was to increase the displacement. All the manufacturers had brought out new overhead V-8s during the 1950s, and in some cases, the original bore spacing and other design features of the first engines didn't allow for the accelerated growth that would take place over the next five years.
The Ford Y-block was one of those engine designs that, although a huge improvement over the Flathead, couldn't keep up with the constant displacement increases. It was increased to 272 ci for 1955 (just enough to be bigger than its rival's 265), and power increased to 162 hp, plus a "special" 272 with four-barrel, dual exhausts, and one-step-higher compression for a rated 182 hp. A 292-cube version was made available in the two-seater Thunderbirds introduced in 1955 that developed 198 hp. It wasn't the T-bird alone that drew crowds to the showrooms; the entire Ford line was radically restyled with bodies that remain as clean as any shapes produced in the mid-1950s, and assuredly collectible today. To be more competitive in NASCAR, a late addition to the 1955 engine lineup included a new 292ci version listed as a 205hp "police interceptor" option.
The following year was perhaps the "glory year" for Ford Y-blocks, with the introduction of the preeminent Y-block at 312 ci, in T-birds first and then in passenger cars. At compression ratios of 8.4:1 and 9.0:1, these babies produced 215 and 225 hp with a single four-barrel and dual exhausts, with a dual-quad option on the T-birds offering 245 hp. These were legendary engines on street, drag, and oval track venues. We know a few teenagers who ran them in Victorias in the 1960s with their street successes marred only by the number of annihilated clutches and stock three-speeds that littered the discard pile behind their garages. The solid-lifter Y-blocks could rev!
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