With duration at anything over 230 degrees at .050 like you have on that cam card, you will need at least a 3,000 stall converter. Advertised duration is not the same as duration at .050. The previous article from B&M can be quite confusing as they mention .050 and then they talk about advertised. Advertised duration means very little as there is no industry wide standard from where to measure advertised duration. Your advertised is 298/313, and your duration at .050 is 234/244. You always use duration at .050 as you know exactly where that measurement was taken and you can directly compare one cam to another, and you know how that cam will act in that engine. That cam company you got that cam from does not tell you where they measured the 298/313, it could have been at .006, or .004, or less or even more, The advertised duration numbers mean very little. Duration is measured from when the valve opens until it closes. A cam lobe is a circle so it is 360 degrees to go around it. Duration of 234 @.050 is measured from the point where the cam moves the lifter up .050 inch until .050 inch before the lifter is all the way back down, there are 234 degrees (out of the 360) that the valves are open . There is no standard in the industry for measuring advertised duration, many companies now use .006 but a lot do not. Advertised duration is in effect for how many degrees the valves are "off the seat", so basically from when the valves start opening to when they close. I don't believe anyone uses .001 to start measuring advertised duration, they usually take the measurement from somewhere in the .002 to .008 range. The difference between .002 and .008 can be well over 10 degrees of difference, that is why you can't use advertised duration to pick a converter, intake, headers or anything else, it varies by too much.