I don't understand the comments suggesting a 357 doesn't do anything under 5,000. With c. 290* dwell and 88* overlap it's not a race cam. Hardly even 'half race'. A race cam would be expected to come in around 4,000 but it would have 100* overlap and 320* dwell (I have 'full race' cams in my B31 and power comes in strong around 3,500).
If indeed people are experiencing no benefit starting in the 2,500 range, then there's summat wrong. Probably the exhaust not suiting the cam or an induction issue. The 357 already has around 3* advance, but another 3* would bring the power band lower if that's what's wanted. Would need a stepped key, as there's no vernier availability.
Having said that, I find it strange the 357 inlet has virtually the same dwell as the 356 - they just advanced it by 6*. I'd have preferred the inlet to stay open longer, bringing the dwell to over 290*. They did, however, get the exhaust lead spot on, something rarely found on a performance cam, where most grinders seem to think the answer for a sports cam to take standard timing and add an extra 5* all round - and another 5* for a race cam. It don't work that way. The beauty of twin cams is that you can juggle things (eg advance the exhaust) to find the optimum. Sadly we can't on the A series.