Super Stock 6.7L Cummins - Engine Builder Magazine

Super Stock 6.7L Cummins

Growing up as a gearhead, Dustin Harrison was obsessed with making everything he touched faster, better and louder. Naturally, he was drawn to diesel engine work and opened Apex Diesel Performance so he could build awesome engines like this Super Stock 6.7L Cummins. Find out what went into building this sled pulling beast!

Diesel of the Week is presented by

With a dad who owned a repair shop, Dustin Harrison grew up as a gearhead, and would try to make everything faster, better and louder, as most gearheads do. When the diesel aftermarket first started to surge in the late-‘90s and early 2000s, Harrison was just getting his driver’s license. His first truck? It was a diesel, and his passion for diesel trucks and engines blossomed from there.

“I had the automotive background and I applied that to the diesel side, and because there weren’t a lot of shops doing diesel performance at that point, we started working on a lot of diesels,” Harrison says. “I opened Apex Diesel Performance five years ago in 2014.”

Apex Diesel Performance has four full-time employees operating out of an 8,700 sq.-ft. facility in Atlantic, PA. The Apex shop is strictly dedicated to diesel engine work and machining, and also has a Land & Sea dyno.

Apex Diesel has plenty of in-house capabilities, but the guys at the shop can also make a 10-minute drive down the road where they utilize a local CNC shop for one-off pieces too.

“We do high performance sled pulling and drag racing turbo work,” Harrison says. “On the engine side, we mainly do Cummins engines – 12 valve, 24 valve and common rail, with the 5.9L and 6.7L being the most common builds. We do a few Powerstroke builds, but we’re close to 100% Cummins engines. With the workload and volume of stuff that we have, it’s easier keeping machines set up for the inline six engines and the inline six heads.”

Apex Diesel Performance’s latest and greatest build the shop recently finished is a big, single charger, Super Stock 6.7L Cummins engine.

The sled pulling engine build started with a 6.7L Cummins factory block and the shop added a one-inch deck plate and ductile iron Power Bore cylinder sleeves.

“We use [Power Bore] strictly for all of our 6.7s, even if we don’t use a deck plate,” he says. “A 6.7 bore is 4.210˝, and we’ll actually sleeve it back to a 4.125˝ bore. The sleeves work pretty well and we haven’t had any failures or cracks. The factory machines the block and we clearance the bottom of the liners and the inside of the block a little bit for the longer rods and the rotating assembly with the smaller bore size. If we don’t, we get into a little bit of clearancing issues there.”

The shop uses a factory crankshaft as well, which is a 4.880˝ stroke and is extremely strong and a good design right out of the box, according to Harrison. The shop also opts to use the ‘old school,’ 12-valve cylinder head, which is a Hamilton Cam’s aftermarket casting.

“We make our own bottom end girdle too – a 14 millimeter, one-piece, bottom end girdle,” he says. “It’s the same thing with the top – a 14 millimeter ARP 625 head stud. They hold up pretty good and we don’t usually have any firing or head gasket trouble out of them, which for the boost and the cylinder pressure we run is pretty impressive. This set up makes about 120 pounds of pressure on just a single charger.

“We also make our own billet rods, which are custom, one-inch longer, triple-beam rods. These are similar to the H-beams, but we add a third beam in the center of the connecting rod. We modify the block for roller cam bearings and we modify the lifter bores to accept a roller lifter instead of the factory flat tappet style. We run a Crower keyed lifter and a bronze bushing in the lifter bores.”

For this build, Apex runs tool steel wrist pins and tool steel, solid pushrods due to the cylinder pressure and the spring pressure of the engine.

“We’re running into a little bit of deflection and clearance issues in the cylinder head because with the really high lift, high duration camshafts we run, you can only clearance the head so far, so you can’t get a real big pushrod in them,” Harrison says. “So we stay with a smaller, tool steel, Top Fuel dragster, pushrod and stay with a smaller diameter. We get those from Manton.”

The 6.7 Cummins also gets equipped with Arias forged pistons, a Fluidampr, a billet roller rocker system for better valvetrain geometry, Clevite coated bearings, a 17mm Hypermax Sigma pump, Sheid Diesel injectors, and a wet sump, R&R external, three-stage oiling system.

To cap off the build, Apex has a 4.5˝ ball bearing, billet center section HX82 turbocharger on the 6.7.

“On the dyno, the 6.7L Cummins made just over 2,800 horsepower,” Harrison says. “We’re about one to one horsepower and torque.”

The Diesel of the Week eNewsletter is sponsored by AMSOIL.

If you have an engine you would like to highlight in this series, please email Engine Builder magazine’s Editor, Greg Jones at [email protected].

You May Also Like

First-of-its-Kind Compound-Turbo L5P Duramax Engine

While incredibly rewarding, nothing about this L5P Duramax build was easy for Lead Foot Diesel Performance – everything was custom or a first. From the billet crank to the one-off compound turbos, this L5P Duramax is impressive. Check it out!

L5P Duramax engine

Some people are just built to modify stuff; it’s in their DNA. Vinny Himes knew from a very young age that he was one of those people.

“I grew up with my grandfather's entire salvage yard at my fingertips,” says the sales manager at Lead Foot Diesel Performance (LFDP), a 32,000-square-foot shop in Monroe, GA, with 22 drive-in bays and 18 employees on site. “I had a fully modified riding lawn mower that would do wheelies across the yard when I was 8 years old.”

Turbocharged 5.9L VP44 Cummins Engine

A few years ago, Jordan Blackard stumbled upon a 2nd Gen 2001 Ram 2500 that was being sold by Chase Fleece of Fleece Performance. After a few years of casual driving and fixing it up, he decided in 2022 to get working on a race build featuring a 5.9L VP44 Cummins engine. Check it out!

415 cid Billet Cummins Engine in a Pro275 Cadillac

Ring Racing owner Jared Ring revealed a metamorphosis to this 2016 Cadillac ATS-V last week. The Cadillac is now equipped with radial tires and a 415 cid Cummins engine built by Freedom Racing Engines, and the combo just competed at Lights Out 15.

Cummins-powered Cadillac ATS-V Pro275 drag car
Turbocharged 5.9L Common Rail Cummins Engine in a 1947 Ford

After sitting in his father-in-law’s backyard for a number of years, this 1947 Ford was gifted to Chase Wells’ wife. Chase owns 1 Way Diesel Performance and knew someday he’d bring the truck back to life. He did so using a 5.9L common rail Cummins engine on a special episode of Texas Metal’s Loud and Lifted. Check out the result.

1,000-HP Capable 6.7L Powerstroke Engine

Nick Stoner, a customer of Kill Devil Diesel, recently got his fully built 6.7L Powerstroke engine – a build Nick wanted to be capable of 1,000 horsepower. However, Nick is no longer building the truck the engine was going into, so this badass diesel engine is for sale. Check it out.

6.7L Powerstroke engine

Other Posts

540 cid Small Block John Deere Light Pro Stock Engine

When it comes to PRI booth engines, Fluidampr has been a great booth to visit over the last couple years, and at the 2023 show the company had a VG Motorsports-built small block John Deere Light Pro Stock engine on display that definitely stopped us in our tracks. We got to speak with VG Motorsports

Wagler’s New Billet Duramax for Drag-and-Drive

Jeremy Wagler and his team at Wagler Competition Products have become well-known for their diesel work, and specifically the shop’s enhancements for Duramax engines. Well, Jeremy and his team have taken another step forward by introducing an all-billet Duramax geared for drag-and-drive competition. We caught up with Jeremy at PRI 2023 to get the full

AMSOIL Signature Series 0W-16 100% Synthetic Motor Oil 

AMSOIL Signature Series 0W-16 100% Synthetic Motor Oil provides next-level engine protection primarily for those with Toyota and Honda applications calling for a 0W-16 viscosity.

Scheid Diesel-Built Triple-Turbo Billet 6.4L Cummins Super Stock Engine

During our visit to Scheid Diesel we had our mouths wide open in amazement for most of the time, but this Super Stock pulling engine really made our jaws drop! Scheid’s Joe Gasper walked us through the details of this billet triple-turbo 6.4L Cummins build, and it’s our latest Diesel of the Week brought to