The stock head flowed 311.8 on the intake at .600 lift and 178.8 on the exhaust side at .450 lift at 28" H20 on our SuperFlow 1020 Bench.
![]()
We are still developing ports, but here is a stage 1 port
![]()
![]()
Regards,
Rick LeBlanc
Livernois Motorsports
and... there you have it
Great stuff Rick!

Yep right from the Source. any Avali time or price on stage 1... ? you can PM me
Currently, we don't have a source for new or core heads, so it would require a customer core.
If you sent you bare/clean heads, the machine work would be $999 + shipping.
Thank you,
Rick LeBlanc
Livernois Motorsports
...but the exhaust numbers seem really low to me based upon past experience. Pretty familiar with flow benches and the intake to exhaust ratio appears low admitting that I basically know little about Ford engines.
Love to see the entire flow sheets plus intake cc volume. Are the heads going into turbulence at flow numbers above .450 or is Ford sandbagging like GM did with the Z06 cutting down on the exhaust numbers using smaller exhaust valves?
I'd like to see the factory cam specs on lift and especially duration. I imagine the exhaust side is being held open longer.
Typically the exhaust to intake flow ratio is the main factor in determining the split in camshaft duration but you need the whole picture to get a better idea of where you’re at. Also one of the reasons I was curious to see the actual flow sheets is what really counts is average flow during the actual lift of the cam. In other words, who cares what’s at .700, if you can only lift the valve .550. There are ways of undercutting the valves to give better high end or low end flow.
I agree, peak flow is only part of the picture, flow at low lift is critical to overall cylinder filling.
In looking at flow sheets the first two things I personally immediately look at is flow @.400 and CC volume of the intake ports. Lot of flow out of huge ports isn’t necessarily a good thing but huge flow out of smaller volume ports is a great thing. Then I look at the rest of the sheet. Flow at very low lift is indicative of how well the valve job was performed.
Seriously, love to see an entire flow sheet trying to plan ahead on what to do. Honestly went through a dozen different camshafts and three sets of heads in a Corvette to find the right combo and I’d rather not do it again. But it certainly was a learning experience to say the least.