Yes I've told Bill what I've done to the engine. When I built our 302 I had the pure stock drags in mind as that's what I built one of our Pontiacs for. So a lot of attention to details and the camshaft was a big player. Per rules lift and duration can't be increased so it's still similar to the original cam with tweaks. The lobe profile is a modern design with a faster ramp, and is a tight lash at .014". I preferred that to keep the beating to a minimum as longevity was also a concern. Turns out my wife drives this thing daily and has logged 30k miles in the last 2 1/2 years.
The rules only state max advertised lift. In our case that's .485 but the problem with solids is the loss of lift with lash, and on a stock cam that's .030". Since advertised lift was the goal, per rules, the lobe is actually a .495" lift, with .014" lash giving me .481" lift, within advertised lift, and more than a 30-30 would have with it's lash figured in. See how rules can be manipulated? Duration is the same but there are no rules for LSA, so that was tightened up to 112 to bring in the torque curve a little sooner. Installed on a 110 ICL which also gave me the int/exh valve relationship I was looking for at TDC during overlap.
The cam does what I wanted, more power sooner in the rpm range, still pulls to 7,000 with a very broad flat curve, still makes 9-10 inches of vacuum at 5,000 ft elevation (14 inches at sea level) and drives around really nice and with a true 11:1 compression it's running perfect on our crappy 91 octane pump fuel. Idle is very close to stock with maybe a slight hint of more attitude.
If I were to build the engine again, and forget about the PS rules, I would likely go with something completely different as there are more improvements that could be made, but this was in the interest of experimenting to see what could be done with it.
https://youtu.be/IZ0HlEY7b74