Wildly Optimistic
Here is a quote from JohnRR from the moparts forum:
"To clear up a few things, that have been posted a hundred times at least, the stock 68-69 383 HP piston has a CH of 1.932, on a factory blueprint deck of 9.980 it sits .0025-.003 in the hole. If you build a 69 383HP to NHRA BLUEPRINT you get close to 11.0 compression, the NHRA spec has the piston .021 ABOVE the deck and it uses a 79.5 CC head chamber volume, NEITHER is factory actual build spec. I have an untouched 56K mile 69 383HP in my 69 GTS Dart and this is how it , and another 69 383HP I have on an engine stand, are built as were others I have disassembled with original pistons and uncut decks." -JohnRR
John goes on to say that a factory a 68/69 383HP would have been "9.2:1 at best". So one could say that the advertised 10:1 compression ratio was wildly optimistic.
A Sealed Power forged 383 piston has a Compression Distance (CH) of 1.920"
So with the the Sealed Power pistons, the blue head gaskets and the typical measured 90-92 CC volume of stock 906 heads, one could expect a compression ratio of
8.75:1.
Add a bigger than stock camshaft, especially a Purple Shaft, and now the 383 feels somewhat anemic.
This post isn't intended to be a knock on 383s. These big blocks can be built into the potent powerhouses we remember as long as we pay close attention to the critical numbers.