I think for reasons of budget I'd change a little. First, Running NOS means a bit more than simple build. second, the forged pistons are heavy compared to factory. third, Magnum heads allow for the designing in of quench. Now, the NOS you want to use is not that much. And, it's only a help when you have a supply of it, and when the engine is tuned for it. You can run out, and the tune you normall drive on is not the one NOS likes the best. I dont recommend ever running NOS on hypereutectic pistons unless you are staying very mild. Like a 75hp kit. Once you reach 100hp, there are timing changes and stuff that should be done to stay safe under boost. Witht the heavy pistons, you can run more juice. But, to internally balance the engine, you will need to add heavy metal (Mallory) to the crank. Because the crank isnt heavy enough to counterweight the pistons. That metal is very expensive, and billed by the ounce. A typical build would require two slugs, at a cost of about $50-$75 er slug to balance, above the cost of the balancing work. Plus, the pistons you have, are not expensive, They are factory type replacements. In your block, that means they end up somewhere around .070 down in the bore from the deck. So static compression even using the "smallish" Magnum type chambers, wont be over 8.5:1. If you raised the static to 10:1, using a tight quench, you would get back a lot of the power the NOS is getting you, and you'd have it all the time, on pump fuel. I would go this way: Sell the heavy forged pistons. Buy some zero deck flat top hypers. The KB167s are $250 a set, weight less than the factory stock cast, and will give you a static of close to 10:1 with a typical Magnum chamber of 62-3cc. Plus, they give a .043 quench with the cheaper Fel Pro blue gaskets. You can add a slightly better cam, and end up with a 318 on pump gas that will easliy make 350-380hp all the time on pump fuel. The forged piston version might make 300-330 at 8:1, andd you'll want the juice for the rest. I think mine's cheaper with NOS at $50/10-15 seconds of use (with a typical 10lbs bottle and 100hp kit). Probably cheaper with the machining costs too.