When I put a Purple Shaft 284/284 cam I bought from Gratiot years ago, uninstalled and new, in my 440 block and checked the degrees on it, that 284 got to be somewhat tame at .050. One other thing was that Max Lift was ONLY for 1 degree of crankshaft rotation. For comparison, a Comp Cams 268 (with the first use of assymetrical lobes) held the valve open for 10 degrees of crank rotation at max lift! The .050 duration was a little less. Agreed, there are many newer cam designs now, so it just depends upon what you want.
A friend put one of the newer Purple Shafts in a 340 Swinger. It sounded very nice and "happy", but he didn't like it and put the original Chrysler cam back in the car. Then, it sounded normal again.
Personally, I think I'd stay with the 451 size. That extra 20 cid might not be felt on the street and would certainly necessitate other upgrades to work right. And cost more to feed.
The car should have a 2.71 rear axle ratio, with 3.21 optional. With the normal tire size diameter, there should be ample torque to fry the tires with a 225 degree @ .050 cam. Check the Lunati listings. They are also advertising assymetrical lobes now, too.
What you can do is retard the cam 4 degrees to bleed off a slight amount of low-end power, only to be regained on the top end. That worked well for a friend with a '69 Super Bee 440 Six Pack, with the stock cam.
Do a dual exhaust with the 2.5" pipe Imperial Mufflers. Not sure about headers as that landscape has changed a lot since I last looked, about 20 years ago.
Check out Hughes Engines and their Chrysler-specific cams and their pistons that make open chambers into closed chambers, operationally. I'd aim more toward 9.5 CR. The modern motors that have the higher compression ratios are using cams which close the intake valve sooner and rely upon higher mechanical compression ratio to make up the difference in power, when compared to the way things used to be. I found an article on that a while back of why it works. Consider too, that you'll need some sort of detonation limiter for anything greater than about 9.5, I suspect. A lower compression ratio run at full mechanical advance (38-40 degrees for B/RB Chrysler engines) is better than a higher compression ratio run with retarded spark (to limit detonation tendencies) . . . per Chrysler.
Remember ONE thing . . . especially for a heavier car . . . don't go to the bottom of the page in the camshaft catalog to find your parts. The ones you really need are higher on the page. Meaning, it's too easy to get too much camshaft for that application, whereas an A-body with 4.30 rear gears would be a different situation.
Better to have an engine with a smaller camshaft (comparatively) that will make rpm and breathe well through a really good exhaust system than a wilder cam that needs higher rpms to work well. The former will get to higher rpms quicker whereas once the latter gets pasts its lower-rpm sag, it'll run strong . . . and last to the finish line.
In pistons, the stock pistons are flat tops, but the 440s are .125" down the hole. That's the 8.2 CR motor with the '72-style heads. The "quench domes" are a neat concept and worthy or consideration.
Remember, too, that most of the people who build the stroker 400s are putting them in hotter B-body and A-body cars suited for drag racing use. You don't want to ruin the demeanor of a NYB with a wilder engine under the hood, with a shaky idle and won't like factory a/c running in the summer, in gear, in traffic. Or cruise quietly on the Interstate at 75mph any worse than they did when new and stock!
By '74, the B/RB stock cams had been enhanced with more duration and more lift to help compensate for the power loss from lower compression ratios. To make "a better air pump". You could do a whole lot worse than to take your stock 400 and put the quench dome pistons in to get about 9.2 CR as those cams get pretty close to the old HP cam that was stock in the Road Runners and such. Add an Edelbrock dual plane and 650 cfm carb, with the high-rise exhaust manifolds and 2.5" pipes. There are some Lunati cams that look to be pretty nice, numbers-wise, and still be good street and highway cams. Consider that with the 2.71 gears, 1000rpm = about 29mph, 3.21 would be about 26mpg in high gear. With the slightly shorter P225/75R-15 size equivalents, 28.5mph and 25.5mph, respectively. Look for cams with an rpm range of 2000-5000rpm, or thereabouts, but NOT with a higher starting point!
Consider, too, that that rpm range can move up a little with a smaller motor (360) and down a little with a larger motor (440). Whereas cam listings usually show a range of displacements for one cam and one power range.
For grins, go to the Comp Cams website and download their camshaft comparing software. Then you can see how various things can affect power curves. Cheap and educational entertainment!
CBODY67