6.3L Stroker Power Stroke - Engine Builder Magazine

6.3L Stroker Power Stroke

The 6.0L Power Stroke engine is beloved by many, but its flaws can make it undesirable to some. However, J&K Engines specializes in Power Stroke engines and has been remanufacturing and stroking the 6.0L to a 6.3L to give the engine new life, better horsepower and torque, and fixed its flaws.

J&K Engines in Mount Juliet, TN has been in business 7 years, but in that short amount of time it has gained a lot of attention for its engine work. Run by Jack Cammarata along with his son Anthony Cammarata and shop employees Keith Proctor and Zac Wolfe, J&K Engines develops unique designs that are very meticulous, clean and different from the rest.

While the shop specializes in building Power Stroke engines such as the 7.3L, 6.0L, 6.4L and the 6.7L, which aren’t very different on their own, it’s what the shop does to them that has gained J&K some notoriety.

Over the last few years, J&K has been doing some research and development on the 6.0L Power Stroke and turned it into a 6.3L 383 Stroker engine.

“We were remanufacturing the 6.0L for about three or four years and just got to know that engine so well and its flaws, and it being a small-displacement diesel engine, this thing’s a powerhouse,” says Keith Proctor. “That’s what everybody loved about it. But of course these little hiccups that International had like the pushrod lengths being a 1/16 of an inch too long, too much preload on the lifters, and down cam load caused a snowball effect and the 6.0L got a bad reputation out there.”

J&K revamped the 6.0L Power Stroke using all of Ford’s revised and updated pushrod lengths, updated lifters and guides to correct those little things that took it down.

“We do a special line hone and get a little more oil clearance than International had when they built the engine for Ford,” Proctor says. “Being a machinist and understanding oil clearances we’re not going by the book, we went by what would work for us and what we thought would work better, and that’s what we did for years and everything worked great.”

The 6.0L Power Stroke’s cam and crank are built pretty darn tough for being a small engine. One day, Keith and one of J&K’s machinists realized that a 6.4L crank would go in the 6.0L and the mains were the same.

“They didn’t change the casting of the block very much at all,” he says. “We started thinking about stroking it and did a lot of research. No one’s ever stroked it before other than Elite Diesel did a 6.0L to a 6.9L back about six years ago, but it was very expensive to build. We built one and redesigned the low-pressure oil pump so the snout would clear and we did some tricky machine work at Industrial Machine in downtown Nashville.”

J&K Engines did two years of testing and beating on this engine, and had a special tune made for it so the fuel and air was right.

“We used stock everything,” Proctor says. “No performance exhaust, injectors, etc. Everything is factory under the hood. We wanted to know what the dyno results in the torque change was from factory to the crank and pistons being stroked, and it put down whopping numbers.”

With stock components like it just rolled off the showroom floor, but with J&K’s short block and OEM heads, it went from 270 horsepower at the wheels to 446 horsepower. Torque went from 485 ft.-lbs. at the wheels to 850 ft.-lbs.

“We’re selling these engines like crazy and everybody wants one, and they’re affordable,” he says. “They’re only $12,500 for this engine and you don’t have to put $15,000 worth of turbos and components on your engine. You can just buy the stroked engine and it’s got all the torque you want and need.”

If you thought J&K was going to leave the stroked 6.0L at that, you’d be wrong. The shop recently finished up building one of these engines for their work truck with added aftermarket parts.

“The 6.3L has the 6.4L crank, which can hold up to 1,400 horsepower,” Proctor says. “The 6.3L stroker is also able to handle a lot more torque. It’s built tougher so we’re going to keep with that design.”

To get that 6.3L design, J&K takes the low-pressure pump and bores it out in the oil pump area where the snout of the crank passes through the front of the engine. This low-pressure oil pump kit is also where the water pump bolts on. It also houses a powdered steel g-rotor that is your oil pump down around the side of the crank.

“From that point it’s machining the inner part of the harmonic balancer made up to the snout of the new 6.4L crank, which is pretty simple stuff,” he says. “Then we do a complete balanced assembly. These cranks go through so much cutting on the journals to accept a 6.0L rod. Those journals turned down so much that the rotating balance assembly is done with the flywheel, harmonic balancer, weight of the piston and a rod. The rods are balanced top and bottom. Pistons are drilled and balanced and fly cut as well because we’ve moved that stroke up and these pistons were jumping out of the deck.”

While the 6.3L Power Stroke J&K sells is pretty much stock components, the shop uses ARP bolts and studs, and uses PolyDyn coatings on its bearings, pistons, pushrods, and valve bridges. The shop also polishes the crank down an extra thousandth to make up the difference from the coating.

The newest build on the 6.3L in the shop’s work truck, however, has a laundry list of aftermarket parts such as Wagler billet connecting rods, a Bullet Proof oil cooler, a Sinister Diesel intake, a KC Turbo Stage 3 turbo, Manton pushrods, a Thumper 1 high-pressure oil pump, a BD Diesel fuel pressure regulator kit and high flow exhaust manifolds, and Diesel Performance Parts Stage 2 camshafts.

“Our machine shop did the o-ring in the heads, 6.4L exhaust valves, a mild port job and the Stage 2 valve springs,” Cammarata says. “We took everything stock out of it. There’s not one bit of Ford left in it. It’s all aftermarket and J&K.”

J&K hooked up that 6.3L to the dyno and hit 550 horsepower with a bigger turbo, 190cc injectors and a FAST fuel pump that gave the engine 1,000 ft.-lbs. of torque.

J&K says that letting the engine breathe better helped the horsepower numbers. With another turbo on the engine it should hit 650 – 700-plus hp.

“The potential is amazing,” Proctor says. “It can get well over 1,000 horsepower and handle it if our math is correct. We’re going to see how much she can take.”

Engine of the Week is sponsored by Cometic Gasket

To see one of your engines highlighted in this special feature and newsletter, please email Engine Builder managing editor, Greg Jones at [email protected]

You May Also Like

Supercharged 588 cid Hemi Engine

Ken Lazzeri, head engine builder for Indy Cylinder Head, has helped build over 5,000 Hemi engines during the life of the Mopar component manufacturer’s business. We were pumped to get time with him to discuss the details of this 588 cid supercharged Hemi engine for bracket racing. Check it out!

We’ve been following Indy Cylinder Head and the engine work of Ken Lazzeri for a long while now. The company, which specializes in performance components such as intake manifolds, cylinder heads, and engine blocks, does so specifically for the Mopar crowd, and Ken’s engine work follows right behind with some amazing examples of Hemi horsepower.

All-Billet Subaru EJ 2.5L Engine

This 2016 Subaru STi, which features an all-billet EJ 2.5L engine, was built to showcase what Kaiju Motorsports is capable of. Not only does it look great, but all expectation is that it performs well too. Check it out!

Kaiju Motorsports 2016 Subaru STi with a billet EJ 2.5L engine
Turbocharged Billet K24 Honda Engine

Noonan Race Engineering is well-known for its V8 engine platforms, but the shop has now dipped its toe into the 4-cylinder world with a billet K24 Honda engine. The objective – huge horsepower, while keeping factory creature comforts. Check it out!

ProCharged 5.000” Bore Space Billet Big Block Chevy Engine

One of the first 5.000″ bore space big block Chevy engines that Visner Engine Development has come out with in this new design, this billet engine was built by Nick Bacalis of Bullet Racing Engines for a 1971 C10 belonging to Michael Rieck. Check out what 4,000-plus horsepower looks like!

billet big block Chevy engine
3,500+ HP 427 cid Billet LS Engine

At ACE Racing Engines, Stefan Rossi’s and Laura Pugh’s hard work has been paying off in the form of increased awareness and business, a new shop space out in California, and best of all, success on the track from numerous customers. Check out this excellent example of a maximum effort, billet LS engine for a drag-and-drive application.

Other Posts

Dave Schroeder’s 872 cid Pro Mod Nitrous Engine

Dave Schroeder and John Ens have been at the drag-and-drive game for a long time. They’ve seen a thing or two and certainly experience3d a thing or two when it comes to this category of racing, and the 872 cid Pro Mod Nitrous engine built by Reher-Morrison is a build that stands out from the

Transtar Industries to Begin Offering OE Recycled Engines

The engines are priced and graded based on part condition and mileage. All recycled engines are backed by a 90-day warranty.

Matt Stutzman’s 540 cid Supercharged Big Block Chevy Engine

We got a chance to spend significant time with Matt Stutzman during the 2023 PRI Show. He’s a Paralympic archer born without arms who’s now setting his sights on Top Sportsman drag racing. We caught up with him in the PennGrade1/DA Lubricants booth to get the details of his 540 cid big block Chevy engine,

Demon Motorsports’ Turbocharged Toyota 2JZ Engine

It was hard not to noticed Damon Elff’s Toyota Supra and its turbocharged 2JZ engine during Sick Week 2024 as it was basically the only Supra there, and the 2JZ made some wicked sounds at the start line. We got a chance to speak with Damon, who owns Demon Motorsports, about his Supra/2JZ combo and