Ranger50 said:
FYI-just say no to hv oil pumps. I'd rather have pressure than volume.
I would actually have neither.
High pressure is not better. Correct pressure is better. That's why the oiling system is engineered to provide the right pressure and not more. High pressure just means you'll be pushing open the bypass valve more often and sending unfiltered oil through the engine, and if the bypass fails, you run the risk of exploding the filter. It doesn't matter if you're making 100 psi of oil pressure, the valve will open around 75.
High volume pumps don't provide any more flow of oil to the system than a regular volume pump. There are fixed passageways in the oiling system for a reason. The only way to increase flow is to increase pressure... which has already been mentioned.
The only real benefit to a high volume pump is that 300k miles from now when the bearings get a little worn and the spaces are out of tolerance, the pump can still provide enough flow of oil at the engineered pressure to keep the bearing spaces full.
Anything else is just a parasitic loss of power, the risk of foaming the oil, and an unnecessary thing. High volume won't necessarily hurt, but it has little benefit. Hi pressure pumps are designed for someone who is specifically engineering an engine for a different application, like racing with a forged crank and rods where the heat causes more swelling than a casting, or in a situation with high stress loads where they have engineered a different bearing tolerance. Unless you have specifically machined the crank or selected custom rod/main bearings for a desired performance aspect, a high pressure pump is not typically called for.
Caveats of course for some factory designs that were low on pressure or volume from the start, but my guess is this is for the 300? High volume if you want, but meh. I would stick with what worked for Ford for 30 years and their billion-dollar R&D budget.
I haven't kept up with bearing designs for 20 years, so I can't speak with recent knowledge about them. I do know that Mahle/Clevite was always a good name, but the last time I bought bearings, those were still two separate companies. Sealed Power does other engine internals well like Pistons, but not sure I've ever used their bearings.