heads and intake or cam?
Seeing as you are this far off now you should stop now and do some learning before you make any bad decisions.
Last edited by 96capricemgr; Jan 16, 2015 at 07:23 AM.
The CC503 is a good choice, however if you want to keep the same cam after you piece together a blower setup, I'd go with the 224/236.
It's a good idea to build a new shortblock when supercharging an LT1. The stock 10.5 compression and cast pistons don't like boost and it will be on borrowed time if you run it hard at all. A new shortblock centered around the stock block and crank, with a set of good forged rods and forged pistons for a compression ratio in the low to mid 9s is much more ideal for boost and will last.
Going the boost route with LT motors is not an inexpensive endeavor. For a durable and reliable boosted setup on an LT motor, plan on having an easy $10k in the motor, supercharger and fuel system alone, and that is before any driveline or chassis fortification takes place. After that you'll need the usual driveline build, which will mean, at minimum, a built 4L60 and premium converter. Since your car is an A4, the stock 10 bolt rear might live for a while if you don't hit the strip often, but it too will have a somewhat finite lifespan behind the kind of power a built and properly sorted blown LT motor can make.
Last edited by HellTeeOne; Jan 16, 2015 at 09:25 AM.
I wouldn't look at boost unless looking for stock manners emissions compliant 11s, or 10s with some compromise to stock-like manners and emissions.
Trending Topics
I'm nearly there, just have a few minor things to tweak with mine to find the last 15-25rwhp. Loosen the lash a tad, replace a restrictive Y-pipe with something better, maybe touch up the tune. It's all in the details.
It seems that most of the LT1 tricks that are old news to folks like us, are almost unknown to folks who haven't had a long history with these motors. I guess that's the thing with hanging onto a platform whose ownership base has been dwindling for 15 years now.
The Best V8 Stories One Small Block at Time
as mentioned doing a cam without doing heads or vice versa will yield little "performance" gain.
If your long term plans are to do a SC motor...I would build it with a donor block.
cam for a SC vs NA motor would be different so either do a LE H/C for the current motor and enjoy and build the SC motor on the side. Speak to Lloyd as you may be able to harvest the heads for the boosted project when you get around to putting that motor in and he can grind you another cam more suited for the SC build
That cam was mild enough to be mistake for stock.
I would say your result backs up a mild cam is money better spent than heads with a stock cam.
And hell Herter tuned the ZZ4 cam setup mailorder so it was probably complete crap, a few tuned from him back then were so bad that when I backed the car out of the driveway it wouldn't climb the incline of the apron to get back in the driveway and I had to reflash in the road.
It had run I think a single pass best of 13.9 with that cam and stock stall, stock manifolds/cats, stock 2.93 gears.
IIRC a zz4 cam sounds pretty similar to a lt4 hotcam? Besides I don't want to get all caught up on what is better. It depends on what you want. I was slap happy with what I did with heads alone. Especially since no one else was doing it. My point is to debunk these claims how there is little to no gain with what heads and stock cam.
Last edited by SS RRR; Jan 17, 2015 at 11:27 AM.
Doing heads and/or cam without opening up the exhaust will choke the car bad. It's something I had read 1000 times over. I did the CC503 with stock heads, supporting valvetrain, 30# injectors, cold air intake, and a catback but stuck with stock exhaust manifolds as money with the project got tight.
I spent more than I wanted to get good supporting valvetrain parts...so I stopped short of improving the exhaust.
The car picked up only a couple of mph in the 1/8 mile and only a couple of tenths et after the cam install was complete. I was disappointed.
In nailing down my oil pressure/control problem(~10psi pressure dip at 3000, then full pressure back by 5000), I went to a 20185 Moroso pan with a Canton 20-013 pickup. They fixed my oil pressure issues, but made my stock exhaust not work as the pan kickouts interfered with the driver's cat. This then force me to long tubes, so I went all in with a set of Kooks and the catted y-pipe.
Man, the difference in power was huge with adding in the long tubes. I picked up ~5 mph and ~0.5 sec in the 1/8th.
I guess the moral of my story is you have to do both intake and exhaust in order to get the improvements in-between(cam and/or heads).
AI ported stock heads are next on my list of hardware mods(maybe a different cam to go with them...). So it will be interesting to see how they do from what I have now.
Here are the times as I did the mods. All times on street tires.
5/22/08
Baseline stock with K&N CAI and Flowmaster catback.
Warmed up:9.1@80.322mph
Full cool down:8.9@82.436mph
10/03/08
CC503, 1.6 NSA Pro Mag Roller rockers, PAC 1518 springs, Trickflow guideplates, 7.2" Comp hardened pushrods, 10* retainers/locks, stock heads, stock exhaust manifolds, catback exhaust, K&N CAI, FMS 30# Injectors.
Warmed up:8.882@83.770mph
No full cool down run.
2/19/11
Added Kooks Long tube headers(1 3/4" x 3") and dual cat y-pipe.
Warmed up:8.437@87.88mph
Partial cool down:8.389@88.354mph
Last edited by ACE1252; Jan 17, 2015 at 07:06 PM.
I guess it just goes to show how much of a restriction the stock cats and Y-pipe are. It'd have been interesting to see what yours would have done with a proper set of longtubes and free-flowing off-road y-pipe. I'd bet you'd have been closer to 108-109-ish mph.














