Good Grief boys, this is a quench dome piston. It is designed to stick up inside the open chamber of the 88cc RPM or the factory large chambered head like the 906. The piston dome should be milled down to at least zero deck if he is using the .040 thick gasket with the 81cc Stealth head. Milling even further would be appropiate if required to obtain the desired compression ratio. Whatever that unannounced ratio may be.
This is correct. The question I have is he using open or closed chamber heads ??.. The quench pad piston is to be used in an open chamber head so you can try to get quench. Yes you can use it on closed chamber heads but you have to cut the quench pad off. At .033 above the deck if it is a closed chamber head and a .040 gasket you would only have .007 head to piston clearence. If they are open chamber its alot of work to get the .045 quench (head to piston clearence) that you want.
I used the KB quench pistons you see in this pic in my old 440 with open chamber 906 heads. This is just a mock up here as the rings are not on the pistons. You will need to install all the pistons and take all the measurements of how far the quench pad is above the deck and how far the piston flat is below the deck so you can also determine comp ratio. Then you have to measure the depth of all the open chambers on the heads and do the math including the head gasket thickness. Thats with open chamber heads. If they are closed chamber heads either get new pistons or mill the quench pad off.
Here is how my 440 came out that I used to run. My heads had been cut .060 so my chambers were not as deep as a stock chamber.
Piston quench pad above the deck - .054
Piston flat below the deck - .023
Head chamber depth - .026
Head gasket thickness - .074
So it came out at .046 quench which is what I ran it at and the comp was 10.0.
It had .020 below the head gasket (.020 + .026 = .046) and the chambers were .026 deep which gave me .046 quench piston to head clearence ( .020 piston flat below the head gasket and the .026 depth of the chambers). It was alot of work to try to get all the chambers equal as you have to check them all and check all the piston pad heights.
If it was me I would use a closed chamber head and a flat top piston at zero deck with a .040 head gasket. The only reason I used the quench pistons in my old 440 was I had all of these laying around. My new eng the 493 is closed chamber heads with a dished piston to get 10.6 comp and it has a flat on the chamber side for .046 quench in my new eng as my pistons came out .006 below the deck. Ron