How much oil pressure is to much for a stock 350

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

1977C20Silverado

Junior Member
Joined
Jul 24, 2023
Posts
16
Reaction score
4
Location
USA
First Name
bradley
Truck Year
1977
Truck Model
c20
Engine Size
350
Why did you replace the original pump? There is no gain to having higher than recommended oil pressures. Only draw backs. The 10 psi/1000 rpm is a minimal rule of thumb. Check your pressure with a mechanical gauge (at operating temp) to see if there even is a problem.
Oil viscosity will also greatly affect your reading at lower temps, if you happened to have tried something different.
The oil pressure went from 30 to 60 to 5 within a minute or 2. Then later on it would start at 30 then go down to 5 until the motor died.
 

andybflo

Junior Member
Joined
Aug 13, 2020
Posts
29
Reaction score
46
Location
Western NY
First Name
Andrew
Truck Year
1986
Truck Model
C-10 Silverado
Engine Size
5.3 LM7/4L60E
The oil pressure went from 30 to 60 to 5 within a minute or 2. Then later on it would start at 30 then go down to 5 until the motor died.

I'll echo a few comments on here, and give you my advice...

Sid, a few comments back said over 60 is bad. Stone cold, for a few minutes, 60 is OK. He's right though, you hold that on a Gen1 SB, you'll start wearing bearings. Cold, with decent tolerances, on 10/30, 40-60PSI for startup is good.

Warm? Idle? Over 5psi. GM's idiot lights turned on around 3. The better indicator is if it snaps up quickly when you hit the gas. That's the key. I had a 355 in my Impala for a few seasons while I was hunting down some rare 409 parts at the time (they're more avaliable now), and she'd idle sub-10, but pull that magical (and mentioned) 10 psi per thousand all day. Sold it to a friend, and it's been running fine for years, other than the pretty regular SBC oil leaks.

Regarding the factory gauge, yes. 80s electric gauges are pretty terrible. I'll give you a personal story. When I did my LS Swap, hit the key, fired up, and I had oil pressure. Good pressure. When she warmed up, hit the 30/35 PSI range, it began bouncing like crazy. 5 to 50 PSI range, faster than you could see. Of course killed the motor, and thought of the million ways I screwed up putting a motor together I've assembled a hundred times, but somehow broke on my own car....

Know what it was? There's a copper pad on the gauge that the needle "floats" on, after 40 years, it floated around there forever. Wore the traces off. I verified with an auto meter mechanical gauge that pressure was steady, checked resistance off the sending unit that it was constant, and the gauge was at fault. Next time the dash is apart, I'll replace that gauge, and move on... I just ignore it now.

If you're truly worried, get a mechanical. Run it parallel for a bit until you're comfortable the "range" is OK. Then unplug it, and sleep well...
 

MikeB

Full Access Member
Joined
Apr 4, 2014
Posts
1,749
Reaction score
936
Location
North Texas
First Name
Mike
Truck Year
1969
Truck Model
C10
Engine Size
355
My stock 350 TBI runs about 60 on the factory gauge at highway speeds. It'll idle down to about 35.
That's perfectly fine. I suspect the OP's engine will do the same.

I've always been happy with 45 at highway speeds and and 15-20 at idle in gear. And that's about 60 or so on cold start-up.

Oil weight will make a difference. If too much pressure is freaking you out, try 5W30 or 5W20.
 

JBswth

Full Access Member
Joined
Jan 24, 2022
Posts
148
Reaction score
115
Location
Vallejo, California
First Name
James
Truck Year
1973
Truck Model
C25
Engine Size
292 cubic inches
Sounds OK to me. If your oil pressure was, say 80 PSI, you might have excessive oil consumption, but your's looks normal for a good tight engine.

James
 

mtbadbob

Full Access Member
Joined
May 9, 2021
Posts
629
Reaction score
948
Location
Montana
First Name
Bob
Truck Year
1987
Truck Model
V20
Engine Size
350
That's perfectly fine. I suspect the OP's engine will do the same.

I've always been happy with 45 at highway speeds and and 15-20 at idle in gear. And that's about 60 or so on cold start-up.

Oil weight will make a difference. If too much pressure is freaking you out, try 5W30 or 5W20.
I don't think my gauge is 100% accurate either. It acts like there's an electronic glitch as it'll jump up and almost peg out at 60 psi, and it looks like something is causing the jump. Maybe I'll get it figured out!
 

Fastduramax

Supporting Member
Supporting Member
Joined
Jun 8, 2022
Posts
211
Reaction score
346
Location
Uranus
First Name
Todd
Truck Year
1986
Truck Model
K10 Silverado
Engine Size
572
High volume and or high pressure oil pumps will always give you higher oil pressure with rod and main bearing clearances reasonably within spec, good tight clearances are much more important than the pump choice but not saying go with a cheap ass pump either... Generally .002" to .004" in a SBC/BBC is acceptable and converts to good OP, as any red blooded male would say the tighter the better, I have set up a couple 383's @ .0015 and they run massive oil pressure ! High oil pressure low blood pressure, live long and prosper Spock...
 

Forum statistics

Threads
42,137
Posts
909,900
Members
33,635
Latest member
85sqbod
Top