Hughes Engines says they have mopar cam lobe profiles that are designed to work with the .904 diameter lifter
https://hughesengines.com/
see their Tech article section
On the topic of picking a cam for low rpm torque, that is the route that I took for the slant in the 83 D150.
the article linked is from that project
https://www.slantsix.org/forum/viewtopi ... 19&t=43301
and while we are talking cams, a few of my recommendations.
1) spend the $75.00 and get a copy of Dyno Sim / Desktop dyno
You can run simulations with different cam profiles, lifts, advance - retard settings and see what those changes do for torque and HP curves.
The better your inputs are for: compression, carb CFM, head flow, ignition timing the closer your Dyno Sim output will match reality.
I had the 83 D150 on a chassis dyno years ago and the torque- HP curves were right on line with what Dyno Sim had predicted.
http://www.proracingsim.com/dynosim6.htm
available through Summitt and other retailers
2) in a truck application, I would stay with hydraulic lifters. The valve cover and the rocker arms are a lot further away in a D series that thay are in an A body.
3) I would not count out a 'stock' 81 and up hydraulic cam if low RPM torque is the only goal. Do a Dyno Sim simulation with the stock cam and you will see a lot of torque way down the RPM chart. Ultimate HP is limited as the engine just runs out of air above 3000 RPM, but its worth a look if low RPM Torque is the only goal.
And here is an article with good basic camshaft information.
https://www.motortrend.com/how-to/under ... afts-work/
Regards
DT
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