I am settling into fatherhood and have sold off my race car projects and dreams, but that doesn't mean that I can't still have some motoring enjoyment.
I bought a 1987 Chevrolet Astro for a family vacation/road trip/going to see grandma vehicle, and would like to breathe some fire into it. After joining the very useful astrosafari.com forum and learning more about the task ahead of me, I have decided that a Gen III/IV swap is more than I want to tackle; there are many fine details that would bog me down/add up cost and complexity/cause my wife to ask why the perfectly good van that we bought hasn't run in six months. So gen I/II it is!
Before I get started asking my questions, I want to say for clarity that I don't want to deal with the LS type engines, regardless of how awesome and superior they are, because I need the swap project to be as straightforward as it can be with as few bends and turns as possible. Even "straightforward" swap projects have their bends and turns. I don't want to add any unnecessarily. I am father to a two month old baby and a husband to a kind and loving woman who I want to keep kind and loving and cannot spend hour after hour fabricating stuff like an accessory drive system when the SBC practically drops into place. So that's why SBC and not 5.3 or 6.0.
I am used to building engines that have practically no aftermarket support, and going to SBC is actually the opposite problem if you can call it that; there is so much information and so much support that making choices becomes difficult for the uninitiated.
As much of an improvement as a TBI (to match the 1987 TBI Astro as exactly as possible to make the swap easier) would be, I don't want to go through the effort of the swap without a substantially better improvement. I would like to build a 350-400HP under 6kRPM SBC with all the torques I can get to swap in when the engine is ready.
I am not a cheapass, and I don't spend money like a sailor on leave. I try to make wise compromises that allow me to have nice things that are well build but also eat better than a hobo and make the house payment on time.
[b]Parameters:[/b]
Long-term factory-like durability is essential; this has to be a minimum 100k mile engine that wouldn't require any special attention that a factory engine wouldn't require. If necessary, I will sacrifice power to meet this requirement.
Budget: $5000-7000 (less than 5K if possible, but not necessary if it requires sacrifices in reliability or substantial sacrifices in power.)
Pump gas. 87 octane if physics allows, 93 if not.
Straight plugs for the sake of header selection.
ROLLER CAM AND LIFTERS MANDATORY.
Injection preferred for fuel economy and ease of operation.
Family truckster drivability, 15-20 freeway MPG.
[b]Questions:[/b]
Am I asking too much?
Which cylinder heads should I be looking at? I would like to have aluminum heads, as I am accustomed to that. (Bare heads are A-OK because I would prefer that my cylinder head guy have freedom to make his own valve and spring choices based on flow results after porting)
Which cams should I be looking at?
Which engine blocks should I be shopping for? Four bolt mains?
What is a modest rod upgrade that allows floating wrist pins?
How much compression is safe for the parameters I have given?
Comparing Edelbrock Pro-Flo against Holley Sniper, is one better than the other in my application?
I realize that there are probably dozens of books on the subject of building SBC engines. If you have one to recommend, I am happy to buy one.