5.9 stroker build

Shimming the springs makes them shorter, while adding additional seat pressure. Think of the top of the spring as a fixed point (though that can be moved too with +.050" keepers, etc). When you shim the bottom of the spring, it just adds any seat pressure that's needed and shortens the installed height of the spring. The added pressure can be easily calculated based on the thickness of the shim used and the spring rate. You just have to be careful to check that the installed height of the shimmed spring still allows for enough lift and clearance needed before it reaches coil bind. I hope this makes sense.
Thank you, I get it now. I was thinking about carpenter's shims, which increase a gap. While shimming will increase the seat pressure, shouldn't it also increase spring pressure through the range of compression?

It's still boiling down to two choices: remove, shim, and reinstall 16 springs that were originally installed at the TF factory vs. send back the uninstalled cam and restart my cam grinder search for what will probably need to be a custom grind.