My .02 worth, the short block is essentially the same piece, it is the heads that make a difference in performance. The 413 stock heads are closed chamber, nominal 10:1 static compression ratio with the stock flat top pistons. '66 and '67 440 heads had closed chambers also, the '67 440 head is the "915" head with closed chambers but larger ports and valves than earlier heads. The "906" head used beginning in '68, and later heads, are open chamber, giving a lower static compression ratio with flat top pistons. The primary exception in the 413 head is the maximum performance head (the "286" head), which is a semi-open chamber head and needs domed pistons to make better compression ratio. My max wedge heads are at the machine shop right now, and they just CC'ed the chambers last week, all were 86.5 CC to 87.5 CC on a nominal 87 CC spec, this is bigger than the standard 413 head which if I recall is spec'ed at 76 CC, I may have that wrong. The drawback to using the 413 then comes down to bore size. The smaller bore shrouds the valves a bit more, in fact for the max wedge engines the bores are notched for the intake valves, which still leads to shrouding. However, for a basic rebuild without springing for new heads, etc, you'll keep a better compression ratio with the 413 than you'll get with most 440's you might run across in a salvage yard. That static compression ratio, and high cranking compression if you are running a stock spec cam, give you better throttle response and torque. I generally have been able to run 10:1 or 10.5:1 static ratio in the engines I build for myself with no problem using premium gas and still keeping the total mechanical timing up around 34 degrees. My Cuda 340 has Speed-Pro mildly-domed pistons, nominally 10.5:1, with "J" 340/360 heads, I love the way it winds up sharply whenever I hit the throttle, however it does have a warm cam to bleed off cranking compression. One other consideration is replacement pistons if you need them. somewhat difficult to find at this time. The Badger brand has discontinued them but distributors may still have some in stock, I acquired a .030 set that way last year, by calling a distributor. KB and Silvo-Lite have only low compression and very heavy truck motor pistons. So for a ring-and-bearing job, I think I would stay with the 413, but if it needs pistons, that alone may make you acquire a 440. -- Bill Parker, South Central Indiana '62 Plymouth Max Wedge; '64 Dart Convertible (Kathi's car); '65 Imperial; '65 Barracuda \6 (Kathi's other car);'68 Barracuda Fastback 340-S; '69 Barracuda Fastback now 360 (20 y.o. son's car); '72 Cuda 340