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Old 01-22-2015, 10:30 AM   #24
MikeB
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Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: North Texas
Posts: 4,035
Re: Chevy 350 rebuild opinions

Two nice things about the old school cams:

1. Slow ramps are easy on the valve train, and can get by with less spring pressure. This means they are much less likely to have problems at break-in.

2. Slow ramps typically make less valve train noise than cams with aggressive ramps. The CompCams XE series is well known for closing the valves a bit quick, resulting in some "clicking" sounds. No such issues with Lunati's Voodoo series, from what I have read on the performance forums out there.

BTW, CompCams still sells their 25-30 year old High Energy line of cams that have relatively slow ramps.

And I probably said this earlier in this thread, but for towing applications you need all the low-mid RPM torque you can get (not horsepower and more revs) and you're not gonna do that with even a hint of a performance cam.

Another quick note: The best pickup truck cam I ever had (for a truck that actually hauled and towed stuff) was recommended to me by Crane Cams back in 1995. It's their #114112. Its specs are 194/204 duration @ .050" tappet rise, .401"/.423" valve lift, and 104 LSA.

In a 350 Goodwrench engine with approx 7.8:1 actual compression, 600 cfm 4 bbl, and dual exhausts, that cam made massive torque from off-idle to 3500 RPM. The 104 LSA got the intake valve closed quickly on the compression stroke, creating lots of cylinder pressure. Vacuum remained stock at around 20". The truck would easily run at 70-75 mph up a 9,000 ft pass pulling a loaded 5x8 U-Haul trailer. Just incredible.

By the way, it replaced a 204/214 Performer cam that I had been running (virtually identical to Summit K1102). There was a night and day difference below 3000 RPM. It pretty much ran out of steam at 4000 RPM, but in hauling and towing applications, who cares?
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Mike
1969 Custom/10 LWB -- owned for 37 years. 350/TH350, 3.08 posi, recent AAW wiring harness, 5-lug conversion, 1985 spindles and brakes. Hedman stainless headers. Old Air installation in progress.
1982 Custom Deluxe 10 SWB -- converted from 250-six to roller cam 350 w/ Vortec heads -- sold
1981 C10 Silverado LWB, 305, TH350C -- sold, but wish I still had it!
1969 C10 (not the current one) which I bought in the early 1980s. Paid $1200; sold for $1500 a few years later. Just a hint at the appreciation that was coming.
Retired as a factory automation products salesman.
Worked part-time over the years for an engine builder and a classic car repair shop.
Member here for 26 years! This is the very first car/truck Internet forum I joined. I still used a dial-up modem back then!
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