To do it right is the full fuel system, the good EFI, a solid longblock meaning a forged crank, good rods, very good pistons, good top end, perhaps an intercooler depending on what you're planning to run... Doing it right is not water or methanol injection. It's gettting the base engine strong enough, then using the right electronics to feed and control it so the band aids are not needed. Doing it right is starting with the foundation and building up for the result you want. Not simply adding parts that are not good together. That was my point. It's always easier to see the cost first and go cheaper. It's never easier spending a portion of what should have been spent, then breaking something and havign to spend the total first amount plus to fix all of it. Do what you want to if you can afford to do it right. Because doing it half assed will not do what you want reliably, or not at all. I'd much rather have a lower output car that I can drive any time, anywhere, than something with monstrous power that's all bandaided to stay together. I actually watched a guy spend $50K+ ona car trying to get it done without spending the $3K for a new block, and the $5K for the EFI and fuel system support parts. It never left without coming back in on a hook, and finally the engine totally let go and took $6K of parts already in it with it. It was a miserable experience for the guy and the car was known as a really pretty time bomb.