twolittlebroncos wrote: I'm proposing to find an Edelbrock Performer intake, an adapter, and bolt a Quadrajet. I understand the Qjets are polarizing, but it sounds like they can work pretty well if you're willing to put in the time to learn them. That's my plan.
The Qjet is by far the most accurately metering carb available. It is complex, but its reliable and has far more compensation for fuel curves based on vacuum feedback and throttle position. Holleys and Edelbrocks (Carters) tend to take three "stabs" at fuel; an idle screw, primary jets/rods, and secondary jets/rods. The air/fuel ratios tend to be all over the place. Qjets were able to pass EPA mandates as late as 1989, they were used on everything from 3.8 V6s up to the Cadillac 500. They rock.
Regarding adapting it... its a no-no. You must put a Qjet on a spreadbore intake. Period. Adapters exist, but they are nightmares. The primaries hit the adapter and lose all velocity, and the secondaries hit the adapter like a choke. At best, you will be removing all the benefits of using a Qjet in the first place. Worst case, you'll have serious drivability issues.
90% of street V8s are over carbed. On a small displacement truck motor, there is really zero need for a 4-barrel. It adds complexity, tuning, and fuel consumption that you don't need. Even a pretty hot 304 would probably only benefit slightly from a 4-barrel. The thing that people tend to forget is that an intake restriction only affects things at or near the redline. I personally would much rather give up 2hp at redline (where a jeep will rarely be) than to worry about all the work and tuning of swapping intakes and carbs.
http://www.summitracing.com/parts/sum-8600
I've read that this cam works well in the 360 and 401 V8s, but I'm worried it will overwhelm my little 304. I've also posted a similar thread at Bulltear.
In my opinion, its not too much cam for the jeep, but its way too much for the motor in its current stock state. It will be a mismatch for the compression and head flow. The 304 in there was designed with 3800-rpms in mind for peak RPM. Its likely the 8.1:1 compression as well with dished pistons. They were made as a tractor engine. This cam will be bleeding cylinder pressure at low RPMs where you should be taking advantage the intake velocity for torque. Then when the cam starts to shine, the intake ports will be wheezing hard and won't keep up with the cam's demands. If you go with this cam, you will be a zillion times happier if you do a head swap/head work. That cam needs 9:1 or more.
Is this too much cam? Does the manual transmission help to offset the issues of too much cam? Is the Qjet a poor choice? Any other V8 advice?
In the range of cams you're choosing, the transmission type won't affect or offset cam choice. Manuals are a tough choice if you have a lumpy-idle cam since its hard to negotiate slow speeds with the surging. Automatics of course have the tune-ability of stall speed. But the difference between manual/auto is not nearly as important as ratio.
The single most important part of the transmission/axle you need to consider is the final drive ratios. Upping the cam obviously raises the torque peak RPM, so deeper gearing will add more mechanical advantage for the reduced low-rpm torque. With a 3-speed you don't have much choice. That transmission likely has extremely wide ratio splits to get a low enough first and a 1:1 third. Think of choosing a cam with the widest possible torque curve to compensate for that. I wouldn't worry about a transmission swap to match ratios to the engine output. You're working within a small range of torque peaks. Where you really need to worry about matching ratios is in the higher-torque-peak engines and racing. If you want to swap trannys for an extra gear, a granny gear, or OD, feel free to choose one that fits and don't worry too much about ratios. If you were building a 10:1 engine with a 234/244 cam, then it would be important.
If you're not into head work/swap, think of a cam in the sub-210 duration. Something like a 198/208-112 lsa would bump up the midrange torque without killing low end and give you some more top end. Any more than that and I would strongly suggest heads and headers to get compression up and increase flow to match. Otherwise, you'll just have a dog. Keep in mind, the cam that came from the factory is probably about 180/185 duration. Its tiny. You can't deviate far from that without a comprehensive set of engine upgrades.
But... I must say.... Learn Qjets. Fabulous carb, works wonderfully, and most American engines can be had with a spreadbore intake. I just put a Qjet on a buddy's Ford 460, and I know a guy with one on a Dodge 440. Once you dig into a few, they are super easy. I'm getting to the point now where I'm doing custom mods to Qjets with pretty good success.