It depends on the transmission and any modifications to the engine.
I would depend on if you are asking a Chevy man or a Mopar man. Personally I like the Chevy 350. If you are referring to a Chevy 383 made from a 350 block with a 400 crank, it would always make more torque than a 350. So if torque is what you're after, "there's no replacement for displacement".
400 block, with a 350 crankshaft. 383 cid.
A 383 small block Chevy engine typically weighs around 500-550 pounds, depending on its components and accessories.
NO, the 383 is called a stroker engine. It is a 350 with a 400 crankshaft that is machined, to make it work in a 350 block. There are other factors and modifications to be made when building a stroker. The only 383 that came from the factory is in Chrysler vehicles.
Yes and no. Dodge did make a V8 engine that displaced 383 cubic inches from the factory. However, a Chevy 350 can be modified to displace 383 cubic inches if you bore the cylinders .030" over and replace the entire rotating assembly (pistons, connecting rods, and crankshaft) with a shorter compression height set of .030" overbore pistons, either factory length or longer connecting rods, and a crankshaft with a 3.75" stroke. This Chevy 383 is quite popular among hot rodders and drag racers.
No, not unless summit racing makes a special adapter plate to do it.
The Dodge 383 is not a stroker like a Chevy small block engine. The 383 was a factory offering from Chrysler, and is one of the "B" series engines. It is very similar to the other Chrysler big blocks like the 413, 426, 400 and 440.
the 383 magnum engine roadrunner in 1969 had 335 horse, the 1968 383 roadrunner had 325 horse.
Chrysler 383 is a big block. The Chevy 383, is a de stroked 400, small block.
I believe 383 was a Chrysler engine.
If you wanted to put a 3.75" stroker crankshaft with a with a 0.05" offset grind into a Ford engine with a 4" bore (such as a Windsor 351) you could make a 383ci Ford stroker. But as for making the traditional Chevy stroker engine, you can't turn a Ford engine into a Chevy engine.