Originally Posted by
kenvq35
Your circumstance is different but for a daily driven car the ve is the better choice for all motor imo. You can sale your de after the swap and still be ahead of the game after the rpm switches, 2.5 header/exhaust and safc for tuning. Later you could get some n1s if thats what you choice to do. Like i stated before this is just my opinion.
Originally Posted by
Chris101 I still disagree considering I sold my last SR20de engine for $250 (not a lot of 'recovery' monies there)
I also don't see how a VE is going to be 'more reliable' than cams in a DE and it no matter how you look at it, cams are cheaper than going VE.
If you want to go VE for a daily, by all means, do it and I agree it can indeed be as reliable as a standard sr20de... but don't try to tell people it is cheaper, better or more reliable than cams because that just isn't the case. (not if you install cams properly anyway)
As Chris has said, you barely recoup any money on a standard USDM DE. I have sourced them locally for $150-300 in various junkyards, plus they do not pull a premium before race wars like they used to. HAHA. But seriously, you can't compare a proper VE set-up to a DE. VE will always cost more money. Yes, the performance and performance ceiling is higher with the VE, but reliability differences are not there from what I have read. Reliability tends to be relative to build, needs, and goals for the car.
VE requires window switches, SHOULD have big/custom header, and ECU at a minimum. If you add the cost of vavle springs, 16ve or N1 or aftermarket cams to get every HP out of the motor, then the cost is not comparable. I personally feel a cammed DE, although not on the same performance level as a VE, is much cheaper, easier, and will be just as reliable. Regardless of how you look at it.
Also, per your own criteria, a turbo set-up is still the easiest and cheapest was for HP per dollar. Not trying to stir the pot, just keeping the info being shared honest and balanced.
If you are building a motor from new, or a separate rebuild, then the VE is the only way to go if you are staying NA.
Either way you go, hopefully you will be happy. My mid to long term goals are for a VE set-up. I feel that the VE, in a DD B or P chassis is the way that these cars should have come from the factory. Fuel efficiency, power band, and NA goodness.