ethan santin
Buck eye jim you gotta go
Sorry sir, I hate to be this guy but I still dont know a lot (anything) about cam specs and what they mean. Could you break down what those numbers refer to?.811/.801 305/295 @.050 ground on a 102
thank you
Sorry sir, I hate to be this guy but I still dont know a lot (anything) about cam specs and what they mean. Could you break down what those numbers refer to?.811/.801 305/295 @.050 ground on a 102
I am in the same boat, needs/wants as you.Application, application, application.
I'm guessing that yur building a street-driven hotrod, but you didn't say.
The cam for a streeter is quite different from one for a racer or for a DD or even for a weekend warrior.
Shooting for a as much power as possible, say500 hp, in a normally-aspirated 340streeter, is pure foolishness..........
When 300 in an A-body is already a tire fryer.
I'm agreeing with 273 above.
we need to know what car you have, what you'll be doing with it, and it's powertrain; plus how deep your pockets are, about how many miles a summer you are thinking of traveling, and even what gas you are willing to cough up for at every fill-up.
IMO
>your first decision should be; is hi-way travelling involved, do you have an overdrive, and if not, how high a cruise-rpm are you willing to put up with.
>and your second decision, if a 4-speed manual, is how slow do you need to drive it
And why-o-why 060 overbore?
> and the third is; if you can only fit 255s in the rear tubs, for a streeter, any more than 300hp is already frying most brands of street tires, to over 40 mph; the point being, 400hp will just fry the tires a lil further/or longer, unless you fix your traction issues first..... which gets expensive in a hurry.
> just for comparison
my 367 has had 3 cams in it since 1999, varying from about 330 hp to over 430hp. My favorite was the 330, and I would have been willing to give some of that away.
Absolute hp, on the street, IMO, is not the best goal. Nor is mega torque off the line unless you can harness it, but at least you can have fun with torque, and that allows you to use a more hiway friendly rear gear. To that end, I gotta say,
for me, with street gears,
I'll take 425 footlbs at modest rpm,
over 425 hp at some high rpm.......
every time.
I'm done with big cams, performance rear gears, hiway buzzzzzzz, and even the race-car rumble out the tailpipes. Done. Gimme a 300/330hp, 367cuber, with an overdrive, in a 3500pound ready to go driver and I'll want for nothing.
For me, overdrive is a game-changer and a must-have. I like 65=2400 or less; which, without an overdrive means a rear gear of 2.94s or less. Well, with a 340, that will be unacceptable off the line. You'd need about 416 cubes to make that come alive, lol.
With a GVod, you can run a 3.73 for the same 2400.
With an A518, it is 4.10s
With a Loc-Up, maybe 4.30s.
This one time I had a double overdrive in the which 65 was 1600, man you gotta hear your 340 singing thru full-length 3" duals at 1600! I think I could drive a million non-stop miles at 1600, lol.
Well, camming for 1600 is not gonna let your 340 stretch out any, lol. I only did that the one time, to prove a point.
Flat or roller take your pick, the cam I suggested is not a catalogue cam. It's just a target. Or it's a custom.Thank you for the recommendation, is that Hughes cam a flat tap or roller? And sorry, what do you mean by my 255's being the limiting factor?
Friend, piggy-backing onto another fella's thread is kindof like eyeballing his girlfriend; you better be prepared for trouble, lol.I am in the same boat, needs/wants as you.
I do have an a518 transmission. I don't need alot of low end since I am traction limited, being it's in a longbed rwd gen1 dakota.
I'm also run a much bigger tire than mosþ of rhe guys on here 29<30".
With the stock tires 215/75r15 and 3.55 rears, I only used O/D on Highways. When I went to 235/75 and for a short time 265/75 tires I basically ran with it off until 85mph.
I could (would) never run more than 3.55 if I Didn't have O/D. I'm looking for 3.73< 4.10 with the 29.5/30" tires I am looking at running.
I wouldn't run anymore rear gear than that. I want to stay between 2,100<3,000rpms on the highway.
That, and requiring P/B is making my cam choice difficult.
That means that is one rowdy *** cam that will have to spin to the moon and run in race gas….Sorry sir, I hate to be this guy but I still dont know a lot (anything) about cam specs and what they mean. Could you break down what those numbers refer to?
thank you
Let's just say it's real big.Sorry sir, I hate to be this guy but I still dont know a lot (anything) about cam specs and what they mean. Could you break down what those numbers refer to?
thank you
sir, that is clearly a 318 cam and we are discussing 340'sPick of decade!
Of course you could have went full AJ, written a loooooooooong reply and then suggest something like
178/186 .420/.420 114/110 because it’s a “streeter”.
Hey Ethan, let me commend you for your candor regarding cam spec knowledge - it's how we learn. There's a lot to know about cams, but these are the basics. The cam in question has these specs: ".811/.801 305/295 @.050 ground on a 102" but the "decode" pertains to any cam. What you are seeing is valve lift, duration, and lobe separation angle - often just called LSA. Lets break it down further:Sorry sir, I hate to be this guy but I still dont know a lot (anything) about cam specs and what they mean. Could you break down what those numbers refer to?
thank you
Thank you so much for this detailed reply sir, I really appreciate it.Hey Ethan, let me commend you for your candor regarding cam spec knowledge - it's how we learn. There's a lot to know about cams, but these are the basics. The cam in question has these specs: ".811/.801 305/295 @.050 ground on a 102" but the "decode" pertains to any cam. What you are seeing is valve lift, duration, and lobe separation angle - often just called LSA. Lets break it down further:
First is valve lift, and this particular cam has different lift for intake and exhaust: .811" int.; .801" exh. (a very high lift cam for a 340)
Next, it also has different duration for int. & exh., 305° int.; 295° exh. (a very long duration cam) Duration is the number of degrees of crankshaft rotation that the lifter is off the cam's base circle and opening or closing the valve. The "@.050" means this is measured between the lifter rising .050", and .050" before it returns to the base circle.
The 102 is also a measurement in degrees, but in this case it is ground into the cam and is the angle between the centerlines of the intake and exhaust lobes. Don't confuse this with installed centerline, which advances or retards the cam. 102° LSA is considered very "tight" centerlines and is a race only cam. The cam in question would make big power, but there would be many other very expensive engine requirements to use its full potential; like high compression ratio, ported heads, massive valve springs, heavy duty valve train parts, etc.
Plus the car would require a loose converter (high stall speed) and low (high numerically) rear end gearing because the power range will be well above idle, probably 3500 rpm or more. But it will pull to 8500 rpm or more
All that said, the best advice I can give for your situation is settle on your intended use, the other components of your build, and then get a cam recommendation from a reputable engine builder. Because ultimately it is all about the combination, not just picking parts based on their specs.
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Have you narrow down what you want do or still up in the air ?Thank you so much for this detailed reply sir, I really appreciate it.
Still sort of up in the air. I have sorta been endlessly researching how each cam spec effects performance. I really don't know how much lift is to much lift or if I should be looking at cams with more duration or less duration. I just really dont want to "over cam it" and decide on something that's to big. While I do want to drive my duster, I really want this engine to hit at least 400 ponies and if i have to sacrifice some drive- ability, thats okay. I have also begun trying to understand the world of aluminum heads and trying to decide what head is going to fit my needs. Its all very confusing.Have you narrow down what you want do or still up in the air ?
I didn't realize the 400 hp 340 thread was yours tooStill sort of up in the air.
Lift is probably one of the easier specs to pick, You base it on your head flow curve your probably good in the .500-.550 range. LSA 110 is generally considered a good compromise.I have sorta been endlessly researching how each cam spec effects performance. I really don't know how much lift is to much lift
really depends on what stall and gears your willing to go with.or if I should be looking at cams with more duration or less duration.
Say your choices of duration (intake) range from 225 to 245 @ 0.050"I just really dont want to "over cam it" and decide on something that's to big. While I do want to drive my duster, I really want this engine to hit at least 400 ponies and if i have to sacrifice some drive- ability, thats okay. I have also begun trying to understand the world of aluminum heads and trying to decide what head is going to fit my needs. Its all very confusing.
I didn't realize the 400 hp 340 thread was yours too
Lift is probably one of the easier specs to pick, You base it on your head flow curve your probably good in the .500-.550 range. LSA 110 is generally considered a good compromise.
really depends on what stall and gears your willing to go with.
Say your choices of duration (intake) range from 225 to 245 @ 0.050"
To me 225 is the middle ground cam, 200 to 219 is basically what's considered RV cams they can get away with stock stall and highway gears and have great low rpm performance, around 220-229 is where depending on engine is where torque is starting to move up the rpms enough that higher stall and deeper gears start to become necessary but still have decent low end performance above that I'd call these cams street strip cams 230-250+ and definitely need gears and higher stalls etc..
Thanks for the link sir, Is that your channel? Ive watched those videos many times, they have been an excellent resource.To me, somewhere in the 225 to 240 @.050 on the intake side is the sweet spot for a street car. You can go a little less for more drivability or a little more for a bit more power. Let lift fall where it may according to the manufacturer of your cam, more lift per the same duration is most of the time better, as long as you have the correct springs and piston to valve clearance. Want more lift and a little more power, use 1.6 rocker arms. Remember that your cam needs to match your converter, gearing and compression. The more duration the more you need of all of them, and the more converter, gearing, and up to a certain point compression you have the less streetable the car is.
As for heads I recently bought a set of Speedmaster heads with a set of their stainless rockers, they packaged them terribly and UPS inevitably damaged them in shipping. After looking at the heads and rocker arms and seeing that the rocker arms hit the springs, and that it was going to be a mess to get those rockers to work, and that from what I could tell any aftermarket aluminum or stainless rocker would not fit and the the geometry was all wrong I decided to return them for a refund. I have just bought a set of Trick Flow heads and I am going to get the Harland Sharp rocker arms, from what I can see these parts will fit and the geometry will be close enough for a street car to run them without any work. The Trick Flow heads and the Harland Sharp rocker arms are not cheap but they are a quality pieces that work well together.
If you want to see a Duster 340 (has a 360 in it) with a 484 lift Mopar Performance hydraulic cam (using solid lifters), Trick Flow heads, Performer RPM air Gap intake, TTI headers running 11.15 in the 1/4 and being driven on the street go look at this channel, you can learn a lot from it:
Duster Garage
Thanks for all your info 273, its all been very helpful.To me heads cam and cr is the main trio of power, obviously you also need the appropriate intake exhaust etc.. to go a long with it.
Heads is basically the main potential (hp) that the rest is trying to bring out, so poorer flowing heads needs more cam and cr etc.. to get similar hp with better heads and should need less cam and cr etc..
So if you want smaller (within reason) cam (driveability) to reach a power goal then better heads are the key.
Now what exactly constitutes a poor flowing head? Is a head rated at 171cc flow worse then one ratted at 190cc? Or could they both be a suitable head just for different applications.Thanks for all your info 273, its all been very helpful.
One that flows less especially if they have similar port size, I don’t mean poor as in bad per se, just less potential. And even though we generally talk about peak flow it’s about the whole flow curve especially between.300 to .550/.600 lift your generally not gonna have more lift than that especially for a 400 ish hp engine.Now what exactly constitutes a poor flowing head?
The bigger port should flow more but don’t always.Is a head rated at 171cc flow worse then one ratted at 190cc?
Gotcha, thank you for answering all my questions, i really appreciate itOne that flows less especially if they have similar port size, I don’t mean poor as in bad per se, just less potential. And even though we generally talk about peak flow it’s about the whole flow curve especially between.300 to .550/.600 lift your generally not gonna have more lift than that especially for a 400 ish hp engine.
The bigger port should flow more but don’t always.
“Or could they both be a suitable head just for different applications.”
They kind of are.
What I mean say stock 340 x heads and 240 cam and 10:1 cr with Air-Gap and headers = around 400 hp. If you wanted to still make the same hp but with smaller cam say a 230 your probably gonna need a head or make the stock heads flow around 20 cfm more.
No problemGotcha, thank you for answering all my questions, i really appreciate it