JT 07LTZ
Full Access Member
Both the stock ones in mine were shot to hell and back when I got the vehicle. Interior rattled and there was a thunk on acceleration. I hated it. H3 mounts installed and a Texas Speed Low Lift stage 2 were used. They say in a vehicle as heavy as ours, its as big of cam as you can run without a higher stall converter which is something I wasn't willing to do. They say its supposed to be a 50ish hp gain at the crank which is about the neighborhood I'd fall into. I don't have a before/after but I did make 295 whp on a 92 degree day on 1/3 of tank 87 octane and the other 2/3 filled with 92. I'm on a 2007, so no vvt. The cam is great. They claim below the curve gains are up to 70 more hp vs stock which I think might be a little much, but damn if it isn't a kick in the pants. The vehicle "comes up on the cam" above 3200 which I wish was lower, but you sure as hell don't loose power down low from stock. Basically, it feels like the trucks got vtec now. I also got rid of my cats, so any slight- and boy do I mean slight- hesitation happens right off idle. Its probably a combination of the cam and going catless, and the fact that I need to change my ATF all stacking on top of eachother for the hesitation. Its not noticeable to anybody but me, but YMMV.
The cam made my tahoe faster, no drop in MPGs which almost pissed me off, and it also sounds pretty cool at idle.
Thanks for all the detail. I bet it’s your cam that gives you more vibration. That choppy idle sounds great though!
My next mods will be a cam, AFM delete, long tubes, and a torque converter. I have the AFM tuned out but I want to replace the lifters etc.
I know a guy who has a torque converter shop and has been building them for 30 years. I’m definitely going to go up to a 2800 stall converter.
Just need to save some more cash. I just spent more than I’d like to admit on all these repairs.