Please explain, cause you guys are loosing me completely.
He is talking about the camshaft lobes. They are not flat. They are ground on a taper. That does two things. First, it contacts the lifters in such a way as to make them rotate in their bores. Since the lifter bottoms are not flat, but convex, that means the contact patch between the lifter and lobe is a small one and not in the center of the lifter. This is what promotes lifter rotation.
The second reason for the tapered lobes is to give the camshaft a "pushing action" towards the back of the block to keep the camshaft lobes in line with the lifters. Of course in a Mopar engine, the camshaft cannot go forward because of the thrust plate. Not all engines have thrust plates, though.
This was one advantage of the 440 6 Pack engine. Its camshaft was a low taper design, to help decrease friction. The lobes were not as tapered as a normal camshaft, as to induce a little more power from a little less friction. Same cam specs as the 375 HP 440, just ground on a low taper design.















