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Comp Cams
I ran a mellings MTC 1 Camshaft in a complete rebuilt 1958-283. Lasted 14 years until one of the lobes wore down. Replaced this MTC camshaft with a Comp cam 12-230-2. Why are the lobes almost an 1/8 of an inch thinner compared to the beefy MTC camshaft? These are both flat tappet cams.
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Re: Comp Cams
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I've noticed many food items at the grocery contain less product for the same price these days. What was once a 22 oz beer is now like 18.2 oz but same price (I'm looking at you Deep Ellum Brewery). This is called shrinkflation. What you are seeing is likely something similar! LobeShrinkFlation perhaps? :smoke: -Kevin |
Re: Comp Cams
I can't answer that BUT,.....I can tell you I used a Comp Cam one time.......and it lost about 6 lobes all at once on a fresh sbc build. This was at about 5000 miles, well after break in. Comp didn't care at all and did NOT stand behind their product. Lucky for me the sales rep at the well known retailer was very helpful and asked me to send him the cam. After receiving the COMP CAM he called me back and told me it was the WORST cam core they had ever seen and will be displayed on their "wall of shame".....several air bubbles plainly visible in the worn off lobes and questionable metalurgy. They let me have a new cam and lifters of my choice (NOT COMP) and sent me a new gasket set. That was it for me......NEVER AGAIN will I ever buy anything with Comp Cams name on it.
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Re: Comp Cams
Three things to keep in mind in today's world-
1. Do not use any recently produced flat tappet cams. The main issues are the metallurgy and the machining of the lifters, not the lack of zinc in the oil. Run NOS parts or roller cams. 2. Comp cams are mediocre at best. I would be looking at other manufacturers. Older stock is better regardless. 3. While the lack of zinc can cause issues, it isn't the only thing contributing to these issues. Still run a high quality oil with zinc in these older engines |
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Re: Comp Cams
Anybody in this thread should watch this, like Jesus, you don't have to believe it. Some people do, some don't. It is interesting though.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WzYHae7yXiA |
Re: Comp Cams
I have always had good luck with Crane Cams.
I don't know how there Quality is nowadays. Comp cams has never been great IMHO. I have seen some people have bad luck with their products. |
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I’ve used hundreds of CompCams with never an issue. Of course, any company can have a bad part, and for flat-tappet cams having the valves adjusted correctly, the right assembly lube, the right oil, and the right break-in technique is crucial.
Lobe width outside of the contact point of the lifter doesn’t do anything but increase rotating mass; it doesn’t make it more “beefy”. |
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Without knowing more about the engine, I can't advise on a roller cam. CR? heads? Engine RPM range? In general, the cam you noted is very mild, so a roller in the same lift range isn't really going to make any real difference in performance and retrofit rollers ain't cheap. Keep in mind you also need to positively retain the cam in a retrofit roller, so it's not just a cam swap. Have you been running an oil with at least 1000 PPM ZDDP? |
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When you replaced the cam that went flat, what else did you do to the motor?
Did you tear it down completely and hot tank it? |
Re: Comp Cams
Seeing this post reminds me of my situation. A couple of years ago (?) started seeing a lot of chatter about flat tappet cam failures. Whatever the actual reason, it prompted me to remove the flat tappet cam kit I had installed on my freshly built, but not yet run, SBC. I went with a Howard's Cam retro roller kit. I figured the extra cost on the front end would offset the potential damage and $ of a complete tear down due to a cam/lifter failure.
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The Jeep forum I'm on has a lot of folks who had been happy users of Comp cams for years, but have had problems wiping them on break-in in recent years
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After my boss had a comp cam go flat in a 66 Shelby with less than 50 miles I found this while looking at cams. The new cam from Holman and moody was sent here and broken in. Way less stress on startup without the worry of the break in on the cam. Worth the money in my opinion.
https://www.camresearchcorp.com/cam-...haft-break-in/ |
Re: Comp Cams
Never mind :)
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Never mind :)
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Re: Comp Cams
Before you install the next cam, you probably want to watch this video. They actually take a flat tappet lifter on a grinder after the blue it up and you can see the problems. He shows they were Crower lifters.
At this point, I would spend the dollars and put a roller in it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MbRjAMhCEJk |
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