Polyspheric
The Polyspheric engines were V8 engines produced by Chrysler from 1955 to 1958 as lower-cost alternatives to its Hemi engines. These engines were based on the Hemi engines, using the same blocks and crankshaft parts, but completely different cylinder heads, pushrods, exhaust manifolds and pistons.
They were called Polyspheric or Poly engines, because they featured polyspherical-shaped combustion chambers. These were formed by two shallow concave domes where the intake and exhaust valve seats were.
Because these engines needed a less sophisticated rocker setup than a true hemi, with only a single rocker shaft in each head, they were also cheaper to produce and lighter. In the Chrysler literature, the Poly engines were also called single rocker shaft, while the Hemi engines were called dual rocker shaft.
These engines replaced Chrysler's flathead inline-six in the division's lower-priced cars, and were themselves gradually replaced by the Chrysler A engine beginning in mid-1956.
Dodge and Plymouth
Dodge and Plymouth both offered Poly versions of Dodge's Hemi engine. The Dodge versions were marketed as Red Ram or Super Red Ram.241
The 241 displaced and was Plymouth's Poly version of the Dodge's 241 Hemi for 1955. Bore and stroke were the same as for the Dodge engine, at by, respectively. Maximum power claimed was.260
The 260, also known as the 259, displaced and was introduced in the middle of 1955 by Plymouth. It was a bored-out 241, having a bore and keeping the stroke. This engine was also used on 1955 and 1956 Dodge trucks. Maximum power claimed was with a two-barrel carburetor; a four-barrel version with was added later.270
The 270 displaced and was offered in both Plymouths and Dodges. Like its predecessors, it was a Poly version of Dodge's 270 Hemi. Bore and stroke were the same as the Hemi's at by, respectively. Outputs are depending on fitment.315
The 315 displaced and was a Poly version of Dodge's high-deck 315 Hemi. Bore and stroke were the same at by, respectively. Only used on 1956 Dodges.325
The 325 displaced and was a Poly version of Dodge's largest high-deck 325 Hemi. Bore and stroke were the same at by, respectively. Used on 1957 and 1958 Dodge.Chrysler
The Spitfire engines were Poly variants of Chrysler's FirePower engine. Chrysler built three Spitfire engines: the 331 Poly, 354 Poly, and the all-new 301 Poly, which did not have a Hemi version. They were introduced for 1955 in the low-priced Chrysler Saratoga and Windsor models and used through 1958.All Chrysler Spitfire engines were low deck; no Poly version of the raised deck 392 Hemi engine was produced.