Hunter79764
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2021
- Posts
- 343
- Reaction score
- 525
- Location
- Grand Prairie, TX
- First Name
- Shawn
- Truck Year
- 1987
- Truck Model
- Suburban V20
- Engine Size
- 350
Good advice in here, I'd say that you could touch up the heads a bit if you wanted, it would add a little without much downside as long as you are just talking basics. Opening up the cam timing can gain quite a bit, but a good tuner can keep it very civil at idle, and will get the most performance out of it at the same time.
How much power you want really dictates what you should do. Really, a modern 300 hp 327 is a pretty good engine (i.e. a stock 5.3). a stage 1 cam will add a little to it, especially in the upper RPM range, with very little tradeoff. Call any of the "truck cam" manufacturers and get their recommendation on specifics. If you want significant gains, boost on a stock engine will get you near 500 pretty easy, and keep your smooth idle and MPG when you aren't leaning into it, but obviously it steps things up a fair bit on the cost and complexity for the install. Your call.
How much power you want really dictates what you should do. Really, a modern 300 hp 327 is a pretty good engine (i.e. a stock 5.3). a stage 1 cam will add a little to it, especially in the upper RPM range, with very little tradeoff. Call any of the "truck cam" manufacturers and get their recommendation on specifics. If you want significant gains, boost on a stock engine will get you near 500 pretty easy, and keep your smooth idle and MPG when you aren't leaning into it, but obviously it steps things up a fair bit on the cost and complexity for the install. Your call.