I had the cam cut for a 196 OHV -- 20* more duration, 0.10" more lift. It didn't affect bottom end at all, gave an added boost of ~20 hp in the mid range (where it was most needed). The car actually had a bit of passing and pulling power while cruising! I also had a 2" exhaust system with 16" generic turbo muffler and an open air filter, which helped the engine breathe better than the stock 1-1/4" tail pipe. I retained the 1-7/8" head pipe (from engine to muffler) as it fit snugly inside a 2" pipe and I didn't have to be concerned with having a pipe made to fit the original manifold. The cam is definitely different from a flat head cam. The bearings are the same, so the cam would fit, but the lobe profiles are totally different. Flat head lifters act directly on the lobes, the OHV has 1.6:1 rocker arms. The OHV cam wouldn't have close to enough lift for the flat head. IIRC your car is a flat head/auto combo -- a red 61-63 two door wagon, right? The turbo muffler isn't real loud, though noticeably louder than the can't-hear-it-running stock muffler. Nash got 110 hp from the 196 L-head by using a 2V carb and glass pack muffler with resonator (to eliminate the "bark" of a glass pack). A good 16" or longer generic turbo muffler would be about the same. It's a little louder than stock, but not really loud. You could use a generic replacement (non-turbo) muffler w/2" in and 2" out and probably get about the same effect as a turbo muffler. The tailpipe size is the real restriction. You can get a 2V to 1V adapter that works fine on the L-head, but that's probably not needed. The L-head already has an open air filter, so no help there. If you don't want the mods obvious, I'd stick with the muffler/tailpipe and a cam change. A modest increase in the cam won't affect heat that much. Lift is limited by the height of the combustion chamber over the valves. You need some clearance, and I don't know how much is there now. Another 0.10" lift should be doable without machining the chambers for additional clearance, but the only way to find out is to pull the head, put a spot of clay on the valves, then reinstall the head with the old gasket (and torque down at least 2/3 required torque) and turn the engine at least one complete revolution. Then pull the head and measure the thickness of the clay. You only have to measure one cylinder, of course. Any company that produces cams for flat heads (even the Ford V-8s) will know the limits for cutting a flat head cam as far as overlap. Most cam companies will regrind a good used cam for you, it just takes a few weeks. I had Lunati in TN cut mine. I just called and told them I wanted a little more driving power, they suggested the grind. I don't think a modest amount of turbo boost (3-5 psi) would cause to much of a heat problem. ALL flat head engines have a problem with heat due to the exhaust passages in the head. Superchargers are used on Ford flat head V-8s with no problems. I'd just stick an oil cooler on the oil line between he filter and block (something small like a VW bug cooler is enough) to help out a bit, and install a shroud on the fan -- maybe the five blade fan used on AC equipped cars too. The L-head 196 has an open four blade fan stock, so it won't take much to improve on that! Now where have you guys heard about bolting a turbo flange directly to the L-head carb mount? ;> I mentioned I'd like to do that a lng time ago, with a 1V throttle body right between the head and turbo instead of the carb. I think the hood is high enough on the American to do that. It would be easy to drill the side of the block for injectors. I'd just use four injectors since there are only four intake passages (two inner ones are siamesed). I suppose I could use a sequential computer and have it fire the two inner injectors twice for whatever cycle was needed. Or use a TBI computer and injectors, but centrally mount the injectors in the side of the instead of in the throttle body to keep height of the TB to a minimum. Could use a "suck through" setup with a 1V TBI unit instead of a carb though. A TBI unit would be a good alternative for the Navarro carb setup, Tom. _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com