I am going to build a 5.9L Magnum engine for one of my A bodies. Question with a 99-roller motor what is everyone using for the oil pump driveshaft for the street?
I am going to build a 5.9L Magnum engine for one of my A bodies. Question with a 99-roller motor what is everyone using for the oil pump driveshaft for the street?
I would ask the cam manufacturer what gear material is compatible with the particular cam you are using. Most magnum builds are using the stock shaft with roller cams.My question is not the pump but what is everyone using for the oil pump driveshaft.
Roller cams use a different " melanized " pump drive shaft gear where can they be bought? Or is everyone running Milodon 21535 bronze gear or using the stock one out of the existing motor.
Is something else available?
If Howards grinds their roller cams on Billet blanks, I would go with their recommendation. My hydraulic roller came from Bullet Cams and was ground on a new cast iron Magnum blank, so I can run a stock intermediate shaft. With a billet blank, you will either need one harder than Chinese arithmetic, or a bronze one that will wear faster than the cam. Good luck to you. Any of that stuff is hard to get right now. I tried to buy a Lunati Hydraulic roller, and the Lunati guy laughed...and said they didn't even have cam blanks to hit each other in the head with if they got in a fight in the shop! This was a little over a year ago, but it ain't changed much.I just wanted to say thank you to everyone who responded to my questions.
Don’t worry about it being a Magnum. Just look for small block Mopar.I am going to build a 5.9L Magnum engine for one of my A bodies. Question with a 99-roller motor what is everyone using for the oil pump driveshaft for the street?
Not one person has ever posted that they ran their oil pan dry using a high volume oil pump with a stock pan.Stock. Stock pump as well. HV pump can pump the pan dry on extended higher rpm runs.
I don't know. I lost a 340 to a wide open cannonball 5 mile top end run. Oil was either pumped dry, foamed, or combo of both. It did have the windage tray in place. I assumed it was at least in part because of too much oil pumped in the top end as it took out the rod bearings. Maybe pumped too much is more accurate than pumped dry.Not one person has ever posted that they ran their oil pan dry using a high volume oil pump with a stock pan.