Older 350 cam question

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Jul 3, 2005 | 12:15 AM
  #1  
I'm swapping a 350 into my 305 T/A, but I hear the 87 and up cams are much better. Should I bother with an 84 Corvette 350 block or should I spend a few extra bucks and get a newer one? Any other problems with older blocks since the 70s 350s are a dime a dozen.
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Jul 3, 2005 | 12:46 AM
  #2  
The 87+ cams are roller cams. You can put a retro-fit roller cam into an older block using retro-fit lifters.
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Jul 3, 2005 | 07:21 AM
  #3  
The engine will be out of a car so it should be much easier to work on, but do you think its worth the extra effort to convert it rather than just buying a 350 with a roller cam?
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Jul 3, 2005 | 08:28 AM
  #4  
it might be worth it, didn't the bolting pattern change for the transmission as well, i'm pretty sure that if i want to mount a newer tranny onto my block which is the same age as what you have i need to modify the bellhousing. Either way though change the camshaft no matter what motor you get, tpi cars only made 230-250hp stock. What transmission are you running in your t/a, and do u plan on changing it soon?




Edit: Didn't the Corvette Have Crossfire Injection that year?
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Jul 3, 2005 | 08:58 AM
  #5  
I have a 700R4 and I don't plan on changing it. I'm not looking for a powerhouse, just more than 190hp. I mean if I have to rebuild/swap a tranny thats fine, but I don't plan on killing mine. I plan on getting a new camshaft, but if I don't have to retro fit it for a roller cam that would be great. Does crossfire injection matter? I'm just using the block.
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Jul 3, 2005 | 12:18 PM
  #6  
If a 350 comes with a roller cam, it will be a stock grind anyway. You could get everything you want from the right aftermarket flat tappet cam for a lot less than a roller set up.

The bolt patterns on the transmissions didn't change. The 1984 Corvette had CFI, but it makes no difference to the block.
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Jul 4, 2005 | 09:43 AM
  #7  
Roller cams have more aggressive ramp up rates. I'd run a roller cam anyday over a flat tappet. Cam companies are slowly trying to get rid of the flat tappet cam altogether, but that's still a ways off. A better way of looking at your dilema is this. If flat tappet cams are comparable and cheaper than a roller cam set up, why did G.M. change in the first place? Retro-fit roller cams do work, but it's more costly to upgrade than to start with a roller cam block. My advice is to spend the extra greenbacks and get the roller cam block.
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