Stan:
I have pretty much the same engine you're building; 2,110 with 90.5's and an 82mm crank, 35.5/40 valve ported and polished heads, 294 duration by 435 lift cam, lightened flywheel and all that good stuff.
I went with the stock, German, 1971 fan shroud and cooler, complete with ALL the associated German cooling tins (oops, I have chromed head tins, but the rest is stock), thermostat, air vanes and so forth. Everything is working as the Germans intended it.
All that would keep it cool most of the time, but on hotter days (anything over 80F) the oil temp would begin to creep toward 220F. It never quite got that far, but it was at least 215F, so I added my full-flow oil cooler/filter system (a DeRale 16-pass cooler and thermostat set for 185F). Now, it'll sit around 180 until the ambient temp gets over 75F and then the external cooler kicks in to hold it right at 200F. If I'm hammering it on a turnpike and have to stop for traffic, it'll run up to 205 F and sit there til I start moving again, and then it rapidly goes back to 200F (I have a dipstick thermometer). I now have a 356 fan pulley and haven't noticed any big difference (since it is probably masked by the cooler) but I'm sure that the heads must be a bit cooler with 11% more air flow across them, even if the oil temp is masked.
So the moral of the story for you is; if you're running a 2,110 and want to run these kinds of temps, this is a good, reasonably priced alternative. I have no experience with "Down the middle" or "911" style coolers, having always used a stock German cooling system appropriate for the engine size I was working with. I HAVE, though, worked with enough German designers in the past thrity years to understand that they have probably thought out the type 1 cooling process a whole lot better than I ever would, and I trust them.
Hope this helps......gn