I think this discussion went way off of the original discussion and Brent's original answer. In that case, the 3.98 stroke vs 3.78 stroke, or even a 4.25 stroke will all rev equally with IMHO very little additional cost. New pistons are a wash on all three combos, rods are likely MORE expensive for the 3.78 and 3.98 and crank cost depends on your tolerance for new or used. Certainly not much different on those builds to drive to 6500 rpm or so
It's not just the stroke that determines ability to rev, and in fact, the stroke can add benefit for a given deck height as well.
- Longer stroke uses a lighter piston
- Longer rod uses and even lighter piston given the same deck
Say we compared the two builds I have going on, a 456 side oiler 3.98 stroke and a 457 428-based 4.25 stroke. The bob weight on the 427 based motor is almost 2400 grams, the 428 based is 2000 grams, and I am using a heavy rod on the 428. I was in the low 1900s on the last one with a bigger dish and Molnar rod. Even without the lighter combo, the two in the garage now have a difference of .88 of a pound for each bobweight. That's 3 1/2 lbs difference across the entire crank......even with a more modern rod and piston on the short stroke motor, you won't gain back the difference. Now 3.98 to 3.78, the difference in piston weight is still an advantage to the long stroke, with minimal changes closer to crank centerline.
Comparing it to a 289, I can't see how this applies, hardly apples to apples as component weight is significantly different. In that case, too many different variables to say that a SBF stroke versus FE stroke defines RPM. Every single component on the SBF is drastically lighter.
I didn't chime in earlier, but within the limits of most of the FEs built here, go for as much stroke as your combo allows, unless you have a good reason. As far as the 427 vs 428, I think there may be some small differences due to valve shrouding, but it depends on the build, and there may be some gains in other areas with the longer stroke. Regardless, I would expect power to be very close to the same if all other components were the same between a 427 and 428