Quote:
Originally Posted by DavidBoren
Use the truck intake if it will fit.
Get a afm/dod delete kit (no matter what).
Ls2 timing set/front cover (if you want to ditch the vvt).
Custom cam, because off the shelf and stock alphabet soup cams aren't worth the hassle of the install. You can get custom vvt cams, too, so you can keep the vvt if you want.
Upgrading the vvt cam requires a cam phaser limiter that costs about the same as all the parts of switch to a non-vvt cam, so it's really just personal preference on whether or not to keep it. Just don't get rid of it because you think you have to.
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Do all the 5.3's have VVT? If it does I would definitely keep the VVT if you aren't going to add boost. It's a great tech that adds power down low. Texas Speed and MAST are the two big guys getting great results with VVT cams. As David said, cost is the same between getting rid of VVT or a custom cam for it, but the power gains will be best keeping it if your tuner is comfortable with it. I went through this same decision myself and ditched VVT only because I was adding an LSA blower and there wasn't a good way to fit a water pump over the bigger cam cover that worked w/ the LSA blower.
I'd be concerned w/ running a big cam and thinner gasket/milled heads and piston to valve clearance. Obviously it can be worked around, just adds another "thought" to the process.
How much is a billet accessory drive? I assume you went w/ a 5.3 due to cost, so seems odd to me to spend so much on drive? You can get a GM vette accessory drive for like $500, but obviously won't look as cool as aftermerket/billet. If you have VVT you'd need to run truck or L99 accessories to clear it. That could be a concern w/ the aftermarket one too.
I've seen on LS1 tech where guys smooth the truck intakes themselves and it looks great.