Fyi, while diagnosing a problem once I tried to use a 600 on my 454 and it wouldn't even crank with the throttle closed.
FYI, that wasn't the carb, a 600 CFM carb on a 454, even at 100% VE, would still be fine up to just past 4500 RPM. And most engines aren't 100% VE. At 85% efficiency it would be fine up to 5400 RPM. Also, if the throttle is closed, it doesn't matter what size carb it is, it's closed. Must have been a coincidence that your battery was getting low or your starter hot during that particular try.
I have a 800CFM carb on my 305. I guess that explains why it runs rich as hell.
A carb works by pulling fuel through based on the amount of airflow going through it. So contrary to popular believe, a bigger carb won't necessarily make a small engine run rich. In fact, if the larger carb does not have enough venturi signal to pull fuel from it's bowls, it will most likely run leaner. This is why too large of carbs have less part throttle driveability. If your engine is rich, then the carb tuning is probably way off.
7162 cam part number
7561 intake part number
What do you guys think of these parts, a little more what you guys were saying...I am looking to buy a carb, intake, and cam, so these two plus a 700-750 cfm carb. Would these be reasonable matched up, this is coming from Eddlebrock also.
That intake is the best intake you could pick for that application (assuming oval port heads). The cam, will depend on your heads. If your heads are peanut port then it's probably a little large. If they are a decent oval port then it would work well since you have a 2WD truck with a manual trans (although not exactly a fast shifting one). I suggest you get headers for that thing as well, and you will most likely need matching valve springs. If you can afford it, spring for the retro-fit hydraulic roller, much better performance than a flat tappet, and no break-in worries, just make sure you set camshaft endplay as well, using a cam button and a torrington bearing cam sprocket. I agree with these guys, I wouldn't get a mechanical cam for what you want to do. Also, once you figure out what heads you have, your best bet is to call up at least 2 cam manufacturers(such as Comp cams, Crane, Crower, Lunati, etc) with all your info, and see what they suggest.