Thinking about long-term plans for my truck (2003 CCSB 4x4 LB7). Let's say the goal is 600 rwhp (or enough to run 7.99 in full street trim in a 7000 pound truck) and to be as reliable as possible in a ~450-500 rwhp daily driver tune.
I'm defining "as reliable as possible" as the closest to brand-new GM longevity as could feasibly be done (recognizing that doubling the power output will still have some inherent detriment). In other words, you could go turn the key in 0-degree temperatures, tow a 10k pound trailer cross-country through 100+ degree temperatures, with it behaving exactly like it did when brand new with 0 miles on it in 2003. Doing all that while not having to worry about throwing a rod through the block, cracking a piston, lifting a head, etc. if you beat on it some. Oh, and doing it for 200k+ miles without decreased service intervals (or at least minimized). I'm basically looking for maximized peace-of-mind.
From a complete powertrain perspective (motor, fuel, & air), if money wasn't an issue, how would you do this build?
I've got a few ideas, but wanted to hear from those of you with more experience. 600 rwhp recipes are pretty common these days, but I wonder how many of them will last 100k+ miles without touching them.
Some things I'm considering:
- Oil-only cooled turbo vs. water & oil cooled
- GM vs aftermarket materials stability (crank, rods, & pistons)
- Stock vs. modded CP3s
- Alternate fire vs. standard cam
- The "little" things like bearings, rings, hardware
- Other "replacement" items to possibly be done (wiring harness, water pump, oil pump, etc.)
Thanks!
I'm defining "as reliable as possible" as the closest to brand-new GM longevity as could feasibly be done (recognizing that doubling the power output will still have some inherent detriment). In other words, you could go turn the key in 0-degree temperatures, tow a 10k pound trailer cross-country through 100+ degree temperatures, with it behaving exactly like it did when brand new with 0 miles on it in 2003. Doing all that while not having to worry about throwing a rod through the block, cracking a piston, lifting a head, etc. if you beat on it some. Oh, and doing it for 200k+ miles without decreased service intervals (or at least minimized). I'm basically looking for maximized peace-of-mind.
From a complete powertrain perspective (motor, fuel, & air), if money wasn't an issue, how would you do this build?
I've got a few ideas, but wanted to hear from those of you with more experience. 600 rwhp recipes are pretty common these days, but I wonder how many of them will last 100k+ miles without touching them.
Some things I'm considering:
- Oil-only cooled turbo vs. water & oil cooled
- GM vs aftermarket materials stability (crank, rods, & pistons)
- Stock vs. modded CP3s
- Alternate fire vs. standard cam
- The "little" things like bearings, rings, hardware
- Other "replacement" items to possibly be done (wiring harness, water pump, oil pump, etc.)
Thanks!
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