What?!?!?!?!looks like a well matched street engine. At .221 duration run manifolds instead of headers.
What?!?!?!?!looks like a well matched street engine. At .221 duration run manifolds instead of headers.
Agreed, I think he is going to be crowding 400? Gonna love it!@Bodyperson
The gears were, and still are, 3.55. With your setup, I am guessing you will be at about 375 HP, maybe more. Do you think 600 CFM is enough carb. It will be great for driving around town and doing burnouts, but I think you are giving up at least 20-25 HP by not going with a 750. I replaced a 600 with a 750 on my 340, and it was a difference you could definitely feel. It was running a bit rich while cruising (gassy smell), so I jetted the primaries down a bit. The gassy smell went away, and I still had the whoomp when I put my foot in it. Just thinking out loud. Even a bone stock 340 had more than 600 CFM.
My worry is that I find little difference from one side of the cam lobe nose to the other side of the nose. The noses are shiny all of the way across. Isn't there supposed to be some angle built into the lobe to help spin the lifter or is all of that motion built into the lifter. It is my understanding the reason for the recent cam, lifter failure, is due to the improper machining of the lifter face profile more-so than the metallurgy. I have some decent looking old lifters.Good cam, use it. I have used Isky shelf grinds in quite a few engines, always give great performance. As for lifters, if do not want lifter/lobe failure, I would find some NOS lifters [ or used lifters & have then re-faced ]. Either/both would need to be 25+ yrs old.
Certainly not you.Probably not is anyone ever happy for long...?
They're good folks. I cannot sing their praises enough. I recommend them constantly and it falls on deaf ears a lot.Well I made a decision. I'm sending my cam and lifters to Oregon Cams. @Garrett Ellison swayed my decision after his shameless attempt to buy the old Isky cam. Just teasing Buddy. Thanks for the info.
The conversation with Oregon Cams was very productive and reassuring of my decision. Real down to earth folks. He even laughed at my jokes.
So I have two complete 340's and trying to make one good one but I still have a question. What is going on with these different looking lifters. The lifters with the extra little ridge in the body seem to have survived the best. I think it is an original Mopar piece. The same height lifter next to it is what was mostly on the Isky cam along with the other odd ball. The other 340 had 15 of the lifters like the one with the extra little ridge and one odd ball. So basically, I have a full set of 16 with the extra little ridge in the body to send to Oregon Cams which seem to be in the best condition.
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Yes, the cup is lower. Ken said he did not have any "off the shelf" cams for this application. He said he was very busy with the work like I asked for. I'm just going to send it and see what he has to say. I'd like to build a little more lift into the cam.That's more than a little interesting! Is the pushrod cup lower in the lifter body to offset for that? I'll have to look through my original parts when I get a chance, I think I have some used factory lifters like that, too, from a couple of 1973-1974 360's. Just curious, did you and Ken decide to go with the similar 487 cam or did Ken steer you in a different direction? He has some other fairly fast rate hydraulics that looked like they also would have worked well for your application.
He can do it!Yes, the cup is lower. Ken said he did not have any "off the shelf" cams for this application. He said he was very busy with the work like I asked for. I'm just going to send it and see what he has to say. I'd like to build a little more lift into the cam.
I remember for a time, Mopar Performance was mixing up big block lifters for small blocks. Not all big block and small block lifters are the same and it has to do with the oil band location. I "think" 67 and prior big blocks took one lifter and 68 and forward took another and they were mixing them up so it's not a stretch to imagine it was happening elsewhere. Just food for thought.After looking at my own pictures I have to wonder if the lifters with the lower oil bands came with the Isky cam. I know all of this stuff is over 25 years old. Not that the lift was that high but maybe by default they just sold them that way.
This discussion is becoming convoluted. All my fault. The lifters on the Isky cam are toast but I'm not blaming Isky. Some dumb stuff was done to that valve train. The other 340, the one I am building, has what appear to be really nice lifters but that cam is flat. It was a low compression 72 block. The bore was .030 over when I acquired it but I think the cam and lifters are original, except one lifter. Just my assumption.My machine shop/engine builder guy showed me an Isky catalog from the seventies that had a "lifetime guarantee" camshaft that had "hardfaced overlay lobes." It looked like the lobe was carbided from just past the clearance ramps to over the nose. I wonder if those may be a special Isky lifter that was likewise hardened to run with that cam?
I also ordered a Coan 2500 stall converter. The car should be a little lighter than stock but my 200 plus fat butt should make up for that. lolIt should do decently well in a stock weight car. Since you already have headers, I probably would have went with this grind just because it's on a 108 LSA and a 104 ICL. Howards, Hydraulic Flat Tappet Camshaft, Chrysler SB 273-360, 220/220 @ .050, .506/.506, 108 LS - Competition Products
I also ordered a distributor limiter plate. Starting to figure this stuff out. Lots of help out there. Just gotta make those phone calls.That'll work! The 110 LSA and 106 ICL are what gives it the same rpm range as the slightly longer duration duration cam on a 108. You'll find that it will pull past the rated rpm range pretty happily.