cwhubb
Well-Known Member
Just curious...if you only had one choice for a modification, what would you do to increase a cars performance, pep, hills, acceleration? a camshaft change or lower gears?
that's a good point about all the peripheral parts with a new camIf you have the compression the cam could be the way to go. If you go too wild on the cam you may need a gear change anyway. The initial cost of the cam may grow when you factor in; new timing chain, valve springs, torque converter, and maybe adjustable rockers and pushrods.
What are you working with now?Just curious...if you only had one choice for a modification, what would you do to increase a cars performance, pep, hills, acceleration? a camshaft change or lower gears?
What are you working with now?
towing a two horse trailer roughly 5000lbs loadIt's all on paper so far but I'm kicking around the idea for an old 2wd drive pu with a '94 360 mag in it, used mainly in towing. off idle up to 60 mph range. (3500rpm?) I think its got 355's in it now
yes, keep in mind it'll be on hilly curvy roads, It doesn't have the grunt I need, I want it to get out of it's own way when I step on it.Depending on the load, that RAM should pull. However, a 1/2 ton/small-block....is far from ideal for towing. Trailer have brakes?
I had heard the 5.7 could be a lost dog with a load but would have thought it would have done better.I have a 2003 Ram, 2wd, 5.7 hemi, 4spd. auto, 2500 series.
Pulling a 24 ft inclosed with a 3700 lb car inside, I wouldn't want anything smaller! Some hills are just enough for it.
It's all on paper so far but I'm kicking around the idea for an old 2wd drive pu with a '94 360 mag in it, used mainly in towing. off idle up to 60 mph range. (3500rpm?) I think its got 355's in it now
thats what i was thinking the whole time i was writing my original post...If this is really still all on paper and you are not trying to build off of existing inventory an old D250 should fit the bill. Most were purchased with work in mind. Heavier frame and springs, larger brakes and lower ratio axles were common. If you really need overdrive stick with a manual trans. The overdrive in the auto will not hold up underload anyway.