Hi Dan!
Friend;
almost any high lift flat-tappet cam is gonna be "hard" on the stock valvetrain, and often noisy, as compared to the stock parts, which were mostly dead quiet.
How "hard" will depend on how extreme you go, and the willingness of the parts to play nice together, and the level of competency in the assembly of the parts.
The last time we talked, IIRC you just wanted a snappy DD.
At the power-level you were interested in, at that time, this won't be an issue; if the rest of the combo is even just half-decently matched.
In a DD, or in a usage as you described, the absolute power is way less important than having good torque when and where you need it; and to deliver that, with a 318/auto, is gonna be almost entirely dependent on the convertor-stall and gearing.
Absolute power does not happen until all the selected parts come into harmony, which is gonna be an rpm range of about 800rpm, centered somewhere between 4200 of the stock 318 cam, to around 5000 if a cam around factory 340 size. The cams in question here are about 248 to 268 degrees of intake duration, thus a range of 20 degrees. The difference between any two cam sizes is about 7*, so 20 degrees is a range of 3, plus the starting place, so the choices are four, the usual choices being; 248,256,262,268; each cam peaking about 200 rpm higher.
With a stock 318 convertor stalling around 2000 rpm, AND the compression ratio remaining unchanged, and with NO OTHER changes, each cam bigger than 248* is most likely to have LESS take off torque. This means, the power will also be down. The usual cure for this is a higher stall.
The thing is, for a mild 318, and at rpms less than about 2800, each bigger cam is gonna need about 200 rpm more stall just to stay even with the torque of the stock 318.
So even if you keep pace with ever higher stalls, the sub 2800rpm power is hardly keeping pace and the low-rpm performance level is not increasing by much. But at least it's not tanking.
So for a DD that spends most of it's life below 3500; and with only an occasional excursion to maybe 4000, which in Second gear with 2.76s is already over 70 mph; going to a 5000 rpm cam with little or no power increase where you need it below 3500, this is IMO not a good way to go.
The DD needs more power in the operating range that it will be driven in. For a given engine, a bigger cam, by itself, is NOT a good idea. The better idea is to
better match the current engine to the intended application; or, to increase the cylinder pressure, to match the new cam.
Increased cylinder pressure, increases power, EVERYWHERE in the rpm-band.