This is long winded, rambling and has no payoff. Proceed at your own risk.
First some background. A few years ago a friend of mine asked me how hard it would be to put a vortec supercharger on his truck. He is not a car guy and I am his only gearhead friend, so he came to me. The truck in question is a 1997 Chevy pickup regular cab long bed 2wd 305 automatic. It's not special in any way except it belonged to his late grandfather.
My main advice was, don't do that. Then I set about finding out what he actually wanted. He told me he liked the truck but just wanted "a little more" I suggested a gear change to give him a but more acceleration as an easy way to wake it up a bit. He thanked me but never did swap the gears.
Fast forward a couple years and the 305 is getting tired. He bought a running 350 4 bolt from my father, coincidentally, With the intention of rebuilding it and swapping it for the current 305. There are worse first projects.
Normally my advice would be sell your truck and buy one that already has the engine you want, but there is sentimental value in this truck.
So here is where we're at. we have a running but tired vortec 305 in the truck and a complete 87 4 bolt 350. To cut down on complexity the plan was to just use the complete induction system from the 305 on the 350. Stick a slightly lumpy cam in there (for the sound mostly) and a set of mid length headers and let him have his hot rod drivable truck.
The issue is the heads. The 305 is a vortec, the 87 is centrebolt. the existing manifold won't fit those heads. Kinda leaves us with a few paths forward each with their own pros and cons.
Option 1: Use the 305 heads.
Basically we'd just be swapping the short Blick. We really wouldn't be buying any big parts. The 305 heads have smaller chambers by about 10cc so there's a boost there, but that's offset by the smaller runners that flow worse. Probably a net loss.
Option 2: Buy a set of vortec compatible 350 heads.
Yeah. This would just work. but the newest used vortec heads are over 20 years old and are usually cracked. New heads will set you back like 800 fir cast iron ones. We're trying to not spend a ton of money.
Option 3: Just slap a holler on er.
A dual plane manifold. Holly 4bbl and HEI is as hot rod as it gets really. We're still buy stuff but that kind of stuff can be found second hand pretty simply. He'd need a good regulator to go from the electric pump to the carb. The downsides here is we're getting away from the plug and play first timer project into more custom stuff. Also... carbs are kind of crap, especially in a northern climate. Being able to hop in your car in 85 degree weather or 19 degree weather and have it crank first try is nice.
Option 4: Ditch the 305s fuel system for an 80's Tuned port or similar system.
Plus... everything will fit, and it'll look neat. Cons still have to buy stuff, have to start doing wiring and custom stuff to make it work. More in depth for a first timer and not necessarily better either.
You made it throught the rambling.
I have told him time and time again that there are better people than me to seek advice from and suggested he talks to everybody.
Given that the project is less race truck and more essence of hot rod, how would you proceed?