The Comp Cams cam I have lists its duration as 252 deg. If the stock cam had MORE duration, why would they advertise this cam as having increased torque and power from the stock unit? It also makes me wonder what the profile of the stock 4.2 cam used in '82 was, and whether I would have been better off to have kept it and simply degreed it myself rather than buying a new cam when I rebuilt the engine? ------------------------ You were likely better off to replace the cam. Lobe centers, lift, and overlap may be different. The duration just tells you how long the valve stay open from when it opens until it closes. Some cams have the lobe centers further apart than others, which increases overlap. You have to compare all the specs -- just one being different could make a noticeable change in engine performance. You know, like 4* of timing... ;> 4* is less than one tooth on the gears, that's why the offset key. On a Corvair flat six one tooth is 14*, on most engines it's 16* (according to a Hot Rod tech article, so that probably means most big 3 V-8s). The AMC six should be in the 12-18 degree range per tooth, don't have anything hand to check that with, and I'm not sure that info is in the TSM. Knowing that it's 12*+ should help though! _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com