Well, I originally purchased this camshaft as my last camshaft wiped a lobe. Unfortunately, that wasn't the case. During the camshaft break-in, the car continued the misfire/knock. We tore it down, found a piece of the #5 piston missing (ring gap was for N/A) and the valve was bent.
Honestly, as far as solid-lifter camshafts go, there is nothing on the market remotely close in terms of what's an adequate turbo grind off-the-shelf. My friend, Randy owns an Eddy headed 451, and went through Bullet for his solid-roller. Duration and LSA are nearly identical (116 LSA on his grind) but obviously, his roller has a bit more lift for the given duration. This grind was initially developed by Harold Brookshire (Ultradyne) for Lunati, which this series was the first (maybe still is) that allows the valve to open very quickly, yet closes it gently; there is a lot of documentation from Harold online that covers this. I had it nitrided, as that seems like the logical thing to do anymore, as the camshaft cores seem to be hit-or-miss from these manufactures. You want the lowest amount of reversion as possible, that is what I was trying to accomplish with this grind. Now, a blower grind would be completely different (closer to N/A), this is specifically for turbo.
400-451 cubes.
Victor / M1 / etc. single plane.
Stock port window heads.
3000-3500 converter.
9:1-9.5:1 CR
2.93-3.23 gears.
My custom grind has 38* overlap (264/272 - 115 LSA - .526/.546 lift). (valve lash is .010 cold) < - 1.6 RR .561/.582 lift.
The factory 440-6 camshaft has 46* overlap (268/284 - 115 LSA - .450/.458 lift)