Oh and i for got to mention the reservoir still has pressure after like 2 days of sitting. And i was told thats a good thing because that points away from a head gasket also.
Before you do something rash, check the overflow tank cap and clean/replace it if needed. That might be all it is. But yeah, the guys are right -- it could very well be headgaskets.
Id also be wary of letting that shop work on my truck.
Like said above, replace the overflow tank cap and see if it persists. They are cheap enough making them an easy way to troubleshoot issues.
If you have pressure in the cooling system the next morning after parking the truck the night before you very VERY likely have a head gasket issue. Mine would do the same thing.
Ok. So when i am tore into this what should i do while i am in there? Goal is to have no more the 700hp. And the budget would be about 12k with a trans upgrade being part of that 12k
A built trans is going to run you ~$4500-$5000. If you are not doing the head gasket work yourself you will end up spending ~$4000 on that job with head studs. Honestly, you may be better served with sticking to 600-650hp as it is MUCH less of a risk on the stock bottom end. You're in connecting rod bending territory. The factory pistons won't be much of a problem at that level.
If you're going to do the head gasket job yourself make sure you buy good head gaskets (I like Victor Reinz Grade C Wave Stopper gaskets), buy ARP head studs, Mahle top end gasket set etc. The most critical is to send your heads to a reputable machine shop to ensure they are flat/not cracked as well as having them make sure all the valve guides are good. I know when I brought my heads to the machine shop with only ~150k miles on them it needed 26 guides, complete valve job, and they had to deck them flat which ended up around $900 all said and done.