Doc,
I was just watching a video about Joe Mondello, who's famous for his knowlege of cylinder heads of all types. In one of these videos, he states that an engine's bacic limitation is it's cylinder head. Well, I'm certainly not the last word here, but I concur. We all know by now that our engines are just air pumps. The airflow numbers of the particular cyl head type you use will dictate how much air you can get in and out, and how agressive a cam you can handle. Good info to remember when choosing a cam. Power brakes and an automatic trans will dictate parameters as well. Unfortunately, there are little, if any, street grinds offered off the shelf for a Cleveland roller. You will likely have to have a custom roller cam ground. There is an old Dynomometer Tech saying,...."Give the engine what it wants, not what you want to give it". Most people over-cam and over-carb their builds. In the case of deciding on rocker arm ratio, the 1.73 is an efficient ratio for these Clevelands. The 1.6 is the Windsor rocker. Chevy guys play around with swapping small block rockers, 1.5 / 1.6 , more to cheat Tech inspections and get more lift from the same cam specs than anything else. Generally, It's thought if you have to change your rocker arm ratio, you chose the wrong cam to begin with.