" From: Tom Jennings <tomj@xxxxxxx> " " On Mon, 9 May 2005, Sandwich Maker wrote: " " " > 'lugging' it is not a good idea. " > " > generally, your engine will be most efficient near its torque peak. " > if you want great highway mileage, you want a cam that moves that peak " > down toward your highway rpm. " " As I see it, there's three things in tension: lower RPMs keeps " frictional losses low, but you must have enough to makde decent " torque and HP. 1600 rpm sounds great, but it's impractical to " make HP there. 2000 - 2500 is probably a good target RPM for " torque peak, probably line up all the hard parts " (trans/OD/axle/tires) then have a cam ground to put it spot on the " target RPM/MPH. all the amc sixes excepting the 4.0 at least -claim- torque peaks in the 1600-1800 rpm range. my 199 sure drives like it; i can pull top [3.08 axle] from almost idle when the car's warmed up, and it feels like it could shift again about 45. i don't think you could move a v8's peak down that low even with the mildest cam; they breathe much better than sixes. but it's moot if you get comparable off-idle and low rpm grunt. " But first you can take really big hints from what the factory did; " little americans with manual trans and steep axles, see where " those cams are ground and start there. 3.08 + od was a factory option in americans even with the 199. ________________________________________________________________________ Andrew Hay the genius nature internet rambler is to see what all have seen adh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and think what none thought