This bothers me:
...Cruising, it is pretty steady at 210.....
It's really weird that the car won't cool more than that at speed. The most you could hope for is getting it to idle at 210 since that seems to be the system's cooling capacity.
Like other posters have said, a small block with a 26 inch radiator, good pump, good fan, tight belts, fan shroud etc, should have no problem keeping cool.
Once you are above the point when the fan/shroud etc. come into play (30 mph or so)the only thing controlling the temp from being too
cold should be the thermostat in a propery sized and functioning system that doesn't have something blocking the radiator.
I know that your previous post on this issue was 6 or 7 pages long, and I think you have checked all the regular problem issues before, but have you ever checked for a head gasket or cracked head/block problem? With the engine off and cold, draw some coolant out of the radiator (until the level is about an inch low) and have a shop (or if you know someone who has one) use a 4 gas (smog) analyzer in the radiator neck (but not in the coolant of course) to eliminate faulty readings. You should have a pretty low amount (say less than 20ppm) of Hydrocarbons (HC) read in there. Then start the car and look for a change, it would be almost immediate and go up over 100ppm or so, and increase if you rev the motor up. Every once in a while we would get a car in where using the smog machine was the only way to tell there was a gasket or casting issue.
Alternate method - with the radiator full, cap on, car dead cold, start it up and have someone rev it up. Does the upper radiator hose pressurize immediately? That would also indicate a gasket or casting issue. Or if you pull the spark plugs, is there one that looks
too clean? That would be a bad sign as well.
Didn't you also have a different belt/bracket/pulley setup than stock? Could you post those picture(s) again?