Home > Car Cleaning And Maintenance >  

Every Single Chrysler Hemi Engine Ever Made

Many Consider Hemi Engines Second To None

426 Hemi engine being dropped into Ricard Petty's 1964 NASCAR Plymouth

Hemi is now inexorably linked to Chrysler’s combustion chamber design, despite not being the first company to use it. Here’s a brief history of the Hemi.

A development P-47 Thunderbolt powered by the first Chrysler Hemi. Reportedly capable of over 500 mph, it was doomed by the advent of jet aircraft.

The first Chrysler Hemi was actually the massive 36 liter XIV-2220 inverted V-16 aircraft engine developed by Chrysler during World War II (but never went into production). The engineers who worked on the project gained valuable experience with cylinder head gas flow  which they later applied to somewhat smaller engines.

What is A Hemi Engine?

First things first, what exactly is a Hemi engine? The name “Hemi” comes from the word hemispherical, and it’s that shape that makes a Hemi engine what it is. These internal combustion engines use special hemispherical combustion chamber roofs, which allow for angled valves with a bigger size, and enhanced porting. The revised shape has a smaller surface area than a regular engine, allowing for less heat to escape and for fuel to burn hotter. And the bigger valves allow for better air flow too. All in all, it’s a revolutionary engine design that has been revised and streamlined over the years, and here are all the Chrysler Hemi engines ever made…

To keep things simple, we’ll refer primarily to the three generations of Hemi engines. Generation I were the models built for various Chrysler Corp. nameplates throughout the 1950s. Generation II was the 426 “Elephant Motor” created for NASCAR racing in 1964 and sold to the public in passenger cars starting in 1966. The engine was revived and updated as part of a Mopar crate engine program. Generation III are the Hemi engines that are being produced today.

First Generation

 

In 1951, Chrysler introduced their new line of V8 motors, popularly known as the Hemi, because the combustion chamber was fully machined into the shape of a 1/2 dome or hemisphere. The intake and exhaust valves were located on opposite sides of the combustion chamber at 90 degrees to the cylinder bore axis, so separate individual rocker shaft assemblies (two on each head) were necessary to operate and control all sixteen Intake and Exhaust valves. It also centralized the location of the spark plugs,making the flame travel shorter, thus more effective in lighting off the air/fuel mixture.

It also gave the combustion chamber, greater thermal efficiency. These engines run cooler because of having a greater surface for heat transfer along with large cooling passages. This design also allowed higher compression ratios, due to its larger volume. Hemi cylinder designs utilize two rocker shafts per head and a complicated valve train. This process proved to be extremely costly and would eventually exceed production costs. Phasing out the Hemi head in the late 1950s in lieu of a much cheaper wedge head design was inevitable.

Chrysler FirePower

Apollo 11 astronauts ride through ticker tape parade in NYC in a 331 FirePower V8 Chrysler Imperial Parade Phaeton

331

This first FirePower engine, used from 1951 to 1955,  displaced 331 cu in (5.4 L). Most used a two-barrel carburetor and produced 180 hp, with the exception of the 1955 Chrysler C-300 which was equipped with dual four-barrel carburetors and produced 300 hp.

The 331 engine was installed in the following models: 1951–1955 Chrysler New Yorker, 1951–1954 Chrysler Imperial, 1955 Imperial. 1952 Chrysler Imperial Parade Phaeton, 1955 Chrysler C-300A,  well as optional on the 1951 Chrysler Saratoga, and the 1952 Chrysler Saratoga Club Coupe

A 331 CID fuel-injected Hemi engine, producing 410 hp, is fitted to a Kurtis Kraft 500A roadster and tested at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. It ran for 1500 miles, including a simulated 500 mile race which it completed at 4 mph faster than the track record. Alarmed, officials lowered the maximum displacement for stock block engines from 340 CID to 270 CID. Chrysler chose to withdraw.

354

The 354 CID engine was released in 1956, The 300B engine was rated at 340 hp with an optional 355 hp version available, making it the first American V-8 to be rated at one horsepower per cubic inch. The New Yorker and Imperial 354 engines produced 280 hp.

The Hemi was optimized for truck service as well. These were available with one or two four-barrel carburetors, and were offered in Dodge’s heaviest duty models as the ‘Power Giant V-8’ from 1957 through 1959; they were the largest of four hemi truck engines offered by Dodge in the 1950s.

The 354 engine was used in the following applications:

1956 Chrysler New Yorker
1956 Chrysler 300B
1956 Imperial Custom & Crown
1957 Dodge D-501
1957–1959 Dodge C Series Pickup

392

The 392 raised-deck engine released in 1957 was offered in two configurations: 325 hp with 9.25:1 compression and 345 hp with 10:1 compression, both with a single four-barrel carburetor. A dual four-barrel version of the 392 available in the 1957-58 Chrysler 300C & 300D cars was rated at 375 hp.

A rare option available on the 1958 300D was Bendix “Electrojector” fuel injection, with which the 392 was rated at 390 hp. Due to reliability problems with the primitive onboard computer which controlled the injection system, however, 15 of the 16 300D cars built with the fuel injection option were reportedly retrofitted with carburetors.

Don “Big Daddy” Garlits sets a new drag racing top speed record at 170-mph in his “Swamp Rat” 392 Hemi powered dragster.

The 392 engine was used in the following applications:

1957–1958 Chrysler New Yorker
1957–1958 Imperial
1957 Chrysler 300C
1958 Chrysler 300D

In the late 1950s and early 1960s, drag racers found the 392 to be a formidable engine and continued to run them competitively into the 1970s.

DeSoto

DeSoto’s Hemi engines were called Fire Dome.

276

In 1952, DeSoto introduced its version of the FirePower with a displacement of 276 CID (4.5 L). Power output was 160 hp . It was a hot seller, with 50,000 vehicles using the engine until it was replaced in 1954.

291

An increase in displacement to 291 CID (4.8 L) was made for 1955 by increasing the bore slightly.

330

The DeSoto engine was enlarged for 1956 to 330 CID (5.4 L).

Under the hood of a 1956 DeSoto Adventurer

341

Displacement was increased again for 1956 (DeSoto Adventurer only) and 1957 (Firedome and Fireflite models) to 341 CID (5.6 L). The DeSoto Adventurer produced 343 hp using dual  four-barrel carburetors.

345

The largest DeSoto engine for 1957 was the DeSoto Adventurer at 345 CID (5.6 L). Equipped with dual four-barrel carburetors the engine produced 345 bhp.

Dodge

The first Dodge Hemi was introduced in 1953 as the Red Ram.

Dodge did not have a Hemi V8 engine until one was developed specifically for the line in 1953 based on the 1951 Chrysler Hemi design, but down-sized for these smaller cars. They do not share any major dimensions or components with the larger Chrysler and DeSoto Hemi engines.

241

Dodge introduced the 241 CID (4.0 L) engine in 1953. With a low compression ratio of 7.0:1  the 241 produced 140 hp . For 1954, the more premium Dodge engines generated 150 hp  thanks to a higher 7.5:1 compression ratio. The 241 only lasted two years, being replaced by the 270 for 1955.

270

Displacing  270 CID (4.4 L) the engine was used in the 1955 and 1956 Dodge premium vehicles. In the Dodge Coronet, with a 7.6:1 compression ratio, the 270 produced 183 hp. In the Dodge Royal, the “Super Red Ram” used a four-barrel carburetor and produced 193 hp.

The 315 Dodge Hemi Red Ram V8 D-500-1 Race Engine Package

315

For 1956, Dodge offered an optional high-performance D-500 version of the 315 CID (5.2 L) Hemi engine with a four-barrel carburetor. In addition, a “race only” package called the D-500-1 was available through special order with a high flow aluminum intake manifold that carried a pair of four-barrel carburetors. The D-500-1 engine utilized the same Hemi cylinders heads as the base D-500 model.

325

Dodge released a 325 CID (5.3 L) engine for 1957. The base engine came with non-Hemi ‘KDS’ heads while a higher performance 325 was offered with Hemi heads as the ‘KD-500’. Again there was the option of a ‘KD-500-1’ package with dual four barrel carburetors. At this point, all engines carried hydraulic camshafts even though the Hemi valve covers continued to feature dimples to clear the mechanical adjusters.

Generation II

A massive 426 Hemi being dropped into Ricard Petty’s 1964 NASCAR Plymouth

426: The Elephant

The hemispherical head design was revived in 1964 and were the first engines officially designated Hemi, a name Chrysler would later trademark. The Generation II Chrysler Hemi engines displaced 426 CID (7.0 L). Just 11,000 Hemi engines were ultimately produced for consumer sale due to their relatively high cost to produce, a cost that had to be passed along to the consumer. Intended only as a race engine, Richard Petty debuted the Generation II Hemi at Daytona, where he lapped the entire field on his way to winning the Daytona 500. It’s a clean 1-2-3 sweep for the 426 Hemi at the 1964 Daytona 500.

Though being originally developed for NASCAR competition,  used in 1964 in Petty Enterprises Plymouth Belvedere. Chrysler had not intended to sell the 426 Hemi to the public, and as a result the engine was not allowed to compete in NASCAR for the 1965 season.  While several special drag-specific production cars were manufactured and sold with the 426 Hemi, NASCAR didn’t consider that production sufficient.

In 1965, Bob Summers set the wheel-driven 409.227 mph Land Speed Record in “Goldenrod” using four Hemi engines in tandem, to prove that the Hemi was truly the best engine out there.

So for 1966 Chrysler introduced a slightly de-tuned Hemi for its intermediate range of cars and sold the required number of Hemi engines to return to NASCAR in 1966. The consumer Hemi was the same as the racing Hemi but with lower compression (10.25:1 from 12.5:1) a less aggressive camshaft, with cast iron manifolds instead of fabricated steel tube headers. The 426 Hemi was produced for consumer automobiles from 1965 (early ’66 model year) through 1971. The consumer Hemi version was rated at 425 hp with two four-barrel carburetors.

Mopar has brought back the original 426 Hemi as well as some higher-displacement version of the Generation II engine as part of its crate engine program.

The 426 Hemi also was used in NHRA and AHRA drag racing. Its large casting allowed the engine to be overbored and stroked to displacements unattainable in the other engines of the day.  Engines based on the Generation II design predominate Top Fuel and Funny Car classes.

The street version of the Generation II Hemi engine was used (optionally, in all but the last car) in the following vehicles:

1966–1970 Dodge Coronet/Plymouth Belvedere
1966–1971 Plymouth Satellite
1966–1971 Dodge Charger
1967–1971 Plymouth GTX
1968 Dodge Dart SS (SuperStock)
1968 Plymouth Barracuda SS
1968–1971 Dodge Super Bee
1968–1971 Plymouth Road Runner
1969 Dodge Charger Daytona
1970 Plymouth Superbird
1970–1971 Plymouth Barracuda
1970–1971 Dodge Challenger
1970 Monteverdi Hai 450

Generation III


The current-production Generation III Hemi engine heads are no longer truly hemispherical, instead feature a complex than the combustion chamber to maximize power as well as meet stringent emission standards.

5.7 Hemi engine

The 5.7 is a 90-degree V8, 2-valve pushrod design engine, displacing 5,654 cc (345 cubic inches). In its original application in the 2003 Ram truck, the engine delivered 345 hp. The highest current output of the 5.7l Hemi engine is 395 hp in Ram 1500 Truck.

6.1 Hemi engine


The Generation III Hemi has also been enlarged to  6,059 cc ( 367 CID). The capacity was gained through an increase in the engine’s bore. The engine block is different from the 5.7, with revised coolant channels and oil jets to cool the pistons. A forged crankshaft, lighter pistons, and strengthened connecting rods add durability. A cast aluminum intake manifold is tuned for high-RPM power of  425 hp.

6.2 Hellcat


For 2015, Chrysler introduced an all-new high performance supercharged variant of the 6.2 L Hemi engine, called the Hellcat (named after the Grumman F6F Hellcat). The supercharger is a 2,380 cc (145 cu in) twin-screw IHI unit with integrated charge coolers, capable of producing 11.6 psi of boost. This engine is rated at 707 hp  and 650 lb·ft of torque.  This engine is the most powerful automotive engine produced by Chrysler as well as the most powerful engine ever in a muscle car.

6.4 (392) Hemi Engine

To commemorate the Generation I Hemi that established the engine’s credentials for performance, Chrysler created a modern version  of the 392 (6.4 L) Hemi. It was launched in the 2011 Dodge Challenger SRT8 with variable camshaft timing as well as MDS in cars with automatic transmissions. Added for 2015 was a Scat Pack Shaker hood option, which raised output to 485 hp.

Just so you don’t think you caught me on a technicality, I’ll mention a series of straight six cylinder Hemi-head engines built by Chrysler of Australia. There, that’s all of them.

 

 









About Chris Riley

I have been wrecking cars for as long as I've been driving them, but I keep coming back for more. Two wheels or four, I'm all in. I founded GearHeads.org and then built and ran AutoWise.com until selling it to Lola Digital Media in 2020. I look forward to watching AutoWise grow as part of the AllGear group.

×