Spinmonster cam specs 2009
Hydraulic rollers can be revved to around 7500rpm now I think if you have the correct valvetrain.
I will probably end up getting that new fast polymer tunnel ram intake in the future which should get me to about 7500.
I have short travel lifters and good springs to support it.
This bullshit you assume I am saying is something you need to study and realise that maybe it is you instead who is ignorant.
It's common knowledge that 4-6 degrees of overlap in an LS3 and you still get stock like manners with a good tune. Any more than 9 degrees then your driveability begins to suffer.
If you think otherwise, then please disprove what I have stated.
I don't have, or want, to prove anything to you. And no, a cam with 9 degrees of overlap isn't going to run as nice as the 226/234 115+4 I have in this most recent Vette. You might convince someone else of that. Don't waste your time on me.
Last edited by old motorhead; Jun 22, 2019 at 02:27 PM.
I don't have, or want, to prove anything to you. And no, a cam with 9 degrees of overlap isn't going to run as nice as the 226/234 115+4 I have in this most recent Vette. You might convince someone else of that. Don't waste your time on me.
First of all I never said 9 degrees of overlap is going to drive like stock. I said this is about the point where the driveability will begin to suffer.
Around 4 degrees of overlap will drive like stock if you have a good tuner. If any tuner cannot get an LS3 to drive nicely with 4 degrees of overlap then they are not that skilled and you need to find someone else.
The reason the Pat G camshaft pulled better was not because of the overlap.
It has do to the EVO difference and the fact the first cam had it's overlap way too biased to the intake side which also explains why it falls off so early.
That 112 LSA camshaft had a much later EVO open event and of course this will not hang on up top.
And yes I agree, the Pat G spec is far better overall for driveability and power production which comes down to valve events, not specs.
I'm not trying to convince you of anything.
As I said earlier, you are just ignorant.
But it's ok, We are all here to learn something.
It needed compression.
LS3... has more compression than the LS1 and is a bigger motor. I could see it doing well.
The Best V8 Stories One Small Block at Time
One commonly and long available lobe that's good and often forgotten about is the Comp Cams Marine XE. Brian Tooley used it sometimes before the LSL etc
BTR, Cam Motion, Lingenfelter, Land Speed, and many of others cam select an excellent and quiet lobe for your application.
Reher-Morrison Darin Morgan spec'd a very nice 237/245 ~.625 lift 114 for my 416 that's quite. It's a peanut cam compared to what a lot of folks want but ideal for me.
Fwiw - my step son said the 416 sounded "tame and too stock" at idle with its quite lobes and no ticking compared to the old LS1 with the 224/224 XER which had the nasty tick tick sewing machine idle. Don't be surprised in twenty years if Comp Cams is still selling cams with XER lobes just for turn of the century nostalgia
If no one can get 4 degrees to drive like stock in an LS3 then they are not a good tuner,
One commonly and long available lobe that's good and often forgotten about is the Comp Cams Marine XE. Brian Tooley used it sometimes before the LSL etc
BTR, Cam Motion, Lingenfelter, Land Speed, and many of others cam select an excellent and quiet lobe for your application.
Reher-Morrison Darin Morgan spec'd a very nice 237/245 ~.625 lift 114 for my 416 that's quite. It's a peanut cam compared to what a lot of folks want but ideal for me.
Fwiw - my step son said the 416 sounded "tame and too stock" at idle with its quite lobes and no ticking compared to the old LS1 with the 224/224 XER which had the nasty tick tick sewing machine idle. Don't be surprised in twenty years if Comp Cams is still selling cams with XER lobes just for turn of the century nostalgia

One commonly and long available lobe that's good and often forgotten about is the Comp Cams Marine XE. Brian Tooley used it sometimes before the LSL etc
BTR, Cam Motion, Lingenfelter, Land Speed, and many of others cam select an excellent and quiet lobe for your application.
EHI/EHX are the ****.
They also have new low shock solid roller lobes that I’ll be running in my ls7 that improve on the LLSR idea. They have a wider range of acceptable lash to be a bit less fussy and don’t risk hanging the valves open when cold.
Their old hydraulic lobes were super aggressive off the seat and lower lift. It wasn’t that long ago that 6000 rpm with a hydraulic roller was high rpm. Doesn’t make the old stuff bad, just not suited for modern engines.
The endurance lobes like the marine stuff and HUC lobes are better for stability and longevity, but can be lazy.
I find though, those lobes that are too smooth they can be feel a little lazy especially at mid range.
Personally I would rather compromise a little bit and build a stouter valvetrain to handle a little more aggressive lobe.
Not like the ones of old though. They are un-necessarily too much.
EHI/EHX are the ****.
They also have new low shock solid roller lobes that I’ll be running in my ls7 that improve on the LLSR idea. They have a wider range of acceptable lash to be a bit less fussy and don’t risk hanging the valves open when cold.
Their old hydraulic lobes were super aggressive off the seat and lower lift. It wasn’t that long ago that 6000 rpm with a hydraulic roller was high rpm. Doesn’t make the old stuff bad, just not suited for modern engines.
The endurance lobes like the marine stuff and HUC lobes are better for stability and longevity, but can be lazy.
Certainly not a lobe for street use. They are intended for a racing application that may see minimal street use.
I bet they would perform great but be noisy and also wear out your valvetrain fast.
You are better off using the QXI lobes which are designed for street and racing use. These would be the best compromise.
They're a hybrid lobe like Cammotion’s LLSR. You can throw a tight lash solid on them too. Comp just doesn’t prefer doing that and would rather recommend an actual solid roller lobe - hence the new “low shock” lobes that Billy just designed.
I know what you’re referencing - the paragraph in the catalog, but it’s just a general guide. When I asked about the Q series lobes they recommended the E’s instead for best power.
Last edited by spanks13; Jun 23, 2019 at 11:32 AM.
Its the grind I followed over to CF for because some Vette stock cid LS3 guys hit 500whp with it. Spinmonster was all over that thread explaining the wide split. It could have been his ten hundredth cam profile for all i know ( maybe it wasn't even his? ) but its what I remember about it. IIRC that grind ended up being popular at Vengeance racing in the early LS3 days. Cams are an interesting component, the brain of the engine.
Last edited by cam; Jun 23, 2019 at 11:39 AM.
This thread makes meant to start one about Geoff of Thunder Racing and later founder of EPS, Engine Power Systems and the classic TR224 cam







