GrabberOrange69
Troglodyte
If you have tried, or have a Thumpr cam, I'd appreciate your thoughts on it. Pull enough vacuum for the brakes? How low will it idle? I'm thinking about getting the base Thumpr in a 351.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
Hello there guest and Welcome to The #1 Classic Mustang forum!
To gain full access you must Register. Registration is free and it takes only a few moments to complete.
Already a member? Login here then!
I looked real hard at them when I was shopping cams. Wound up going with A Lunati Voodoo 61003. It pulls 28 inches of vacuum, has a nasty lope and will idle down to 600. I really like it.I have a video somewhere......"GrabberOrange69" said:If you have tried, or have a Thumpr cam, I'd appreciate your thoughts on it. Pull enough vacuum for the brakes? How low will it idle? I'm thinking about getting the base Thumpr in a 351.
"Starfury" said:I don't like the Thumpr grinds at all. They're essentially filling a hole in the market for people that choose cams for the wrong reason: lopey idle sound. The power band is narrow and they don't make a lot of power for what they are. There are much better off the shelf grinds.
Sluggo, you don't mean 18" of vacuum @ idle? Most modern stock vehicles only pull ~20" @ idle. 28" is a lot.
"66benchcoupe" said:Plug the vaccum advance on the distributor and you won't see 28". . .
Robert
"Sluggo" said:I don't have a vacuum advance to plug in.
"Sluggo" said:Ok, so it runs about 10-11 inches of vacuum. I was reading the wrong scale. I hate multi tasking gauges. :rant I guess that 95 power valve is coming out of the primary in exchange for a 65.
It does run the power brakes just fine even without the A/C vacuum cannister hooked up.