Steve83 said:
Many people cam SD engines successfully, and SD can handle changes - it just takes more effort (as I said earlier) to make it right. But a mild cam doesn't require much.
Kinda my point. It takes a lot more effort to make it work & the gains are negligible, I think there are better upgrades to be made for the time & money. Yes, there *are* speed density specific cams available (although they're getting harder to find since Crane went belly-up.) but the grinds are pretty mild because speed density simply can't cope with large airflow changes. Small changes, sure, but nothing significant. If that sort of thing worked the guys in the go-fast crowd would be all over it, but there's a reason they all suggest swapping to MAF. Even chips are hard to find. I was fortunate enough to get one for my T-bird when I lived in Memphis because Hypertech needed test cars & I happen to have one of the CFI (speed density) TBirds that they needed. They had the car for almost 3wks but I got it back with a full tank of 104+ fuel, a fresh performance tune & a prototype chip without paying a dime. Great guys to work with.
On an unrelated note Memphis has a great street scene, a number of Hi-Po companies (Lunati, Hypertech, performance distributors, etc), the MotorSports park, a $hitload of hot-rod/racing events, BB King's, Graceland, Beale street, Sun Studio, Huey's, killer freakin' BBQ and who can beat Memphis in May ?

/emoticons/
[email protected] 2x" width="20" height="20" /> (I still have 2 bottles of Corky's BBQ sauce left from the last case I had them send me)
Anything more than a mild grind or a stock replacement cam is wasted *anyways* if you don't have the heads to support the additional airflow & SD has trouble with cams alone, much less aftermarket or modified factory heads. It's certainly a personal choice & if you're doing the work yourself then the labor is free & you're only looking at $300 or so for the cam & lifters but I certainly wouldn't *pay* someone to install one of those cams. If I'm going to spend the $$$$ and go thru the bull$hit of swapping cams then I want one that's going to produce a noticeable increase in HP & torque, not something I need a dyno to tell me it's there. If money is no object then great, spend whatever it takes to get every available pony. If you're on a budget though I'd go with headers & exhaust before swapping cams. Something like the Ford E303 is a good middle-of-the-road cam, more than mild but not full-blown but even that one won't work without a Mass Air conversion (
http://www.fordracingparts.com/parts/part_...rtKeyField=1329 ). A mild cam & maybe some rocker arms with a better ratio combined with headers & duals would give you a respectable bump in HP & torque but the cam/rocker combo would probably put you right on the edge of what the SD EFI can handle without choking. Although with 150K I don't know that I'd bother trying to do anything to raise the engine's output. Probably better to simply rebuild it & incorporate all the upgrades at once. That would be the time to change over to Mass Air or a carb.
Having said all that, Steve is right in saying there *are* speed density cams out there but it will take some looking around to find one that isn't essentially a stock replacement. I think Comp Cams probably has the largest selection but from what I've read the Crower 15511 works well. The Lunati Voodoo cams are supposed to be pretty good also so you could start with those if you wanted to do some research.
Also, you *can* convert to a carb and avoid the entire speed density/mass air tarbaby. Beauman makes a stand-alone tranny controller for the E4OD. If the whole inspection/emissions deal isn't an issue for you then that's probably the way to go because it just simplifies everything.
http://www.baumannengineering.com/tcs.htm