I'm starting to think this whole hv/hp oil pump install thing started just like the whole "I want race car parts in my car" though it's a street/strip car, regular parts work just fine...
:yes: "regular parts work just fine" :thumbsup:
You just nailed it when it comes to a small block ... or even most big blocks.
The engineering that went into the small block is just amazing on many many fronts - and oil system is an outstanding example!
Unless you are purpose building an engine that has operating parameters way outside of the norm, then any major oil system modifications - like radically increasing pressure or volume, redirecting flow or limiting drain back - are just plain old not needed. And a waste of money ...
You are correct in saying that the majority that do wierd and exotic modifications to the oil systems and use midified pumps are mainly doing it because of the 'I want race parts in my car' factor - they have no idea if it helping or hurting their output or reliability.
Modified pumps place increased loads on the valve train, at all the wrong places.
They load the cam and distributor drives causing very rapid wear of those components in many cases.
I worked on one engine built by someone else for a friend that kept eating distributor gears - we of course first suspected that the dist. gear was not compatible with the cams ... nope, a bronze gear lasted about two weeks ... next, knowing that sometimes a cam needs to 'eat' a new gear or two before it beds itself in correctly and the gears will survive, I threw another good bronze gear at it ... it to was gone in a couple weeks - while he was on a cruise

Finally took a real good look at the gear on the roller cam fiquring I would see some damage or probelms, it looked just fine with no wear marks at all, so I called the cam manufacture for different gear recommendation - they were blown away that it was eating gears and had never heard of the type we were using not lasting a reasonable amount of time. Searching for an issue, I started to check some other things and one of them was 'why' the pump drive seemed so hard to turn after one or two revolutions. I installed my oil system primer drive and hooked up my 1/2" Milwaukee drill and gave the drive a few turns - it grabbed the dang drill right out of my hand at that point

Bottom line, I pulled the pan, removed the pump they installed, reinstalled and good standard pump and slapped it back together - problem solved, next gear is still going strong ...
I dont understand this need to braze the pickup to the pump. I just replaced my pump not too long ago with a M55hv and my pump had a provision for me to bolt my pickup to the pump, which I did. Is this because it was a 55hv?
Melling (and a few others, most of which are 'Melling' castings

) offer bolt on pump pick-up bases.
These are for ease of assembly and service, as well as adding an additional safety factor to the possibility of the pick-up falling off.
I have seen a few of the bolt on units fracture the bracket at the pump and the pick-up fell off anyway - but this is on radical marine engines and Class-8 Off-Road trucks that take an amazing amount of pounding.
Throught the years there have been many common methods of decreasing the possiblity of the pick-up vibrating or being jarred off of the pump.
We often fabricated a bracket, welded it to the pick-up assembly and used one or two of the pump cover bolts to retain it.
We also used to fabricate a mount to the stud girdles when we were using them on some endurance engines and in high-output marine engines.
One company (IIRC it was Milodon ...) offered a replacement pump cover assembly years ago that used a modified Ford (they've used bolt-on pick-ups for years) pick-up.
As far as when you would use either a High Pressure or High Volume, I use two very simple rules ... and they hardly ever would apply to a 'street' vehicle
High Pressure - when larger clearance spec.s are required for main and rod bearings. This pump will maintain the pressure in the system throughout the RPM range for short duration match-race engines.
High Volume - when the engine is meant to be operated in the 6~6.5k +RPM range for extended periods of time. These pumps can maintain the needed pressures and flow at these higher RPM levels on endurance engines used in some forms of racing - like NASCAR and INDY stuff.
Hope this helps and others chime in with their input;
John