mopar340dave
Well-Known Member
It just felt a little too much like chain yankin' to me ! LOL
well Mr mopardave340,It just felt a little too much like chain yankin' to me ! LOL
moper said:What stroke is this? The usual 4" small block? Sorry if I didnt see that in my read. What is this going in again? What are you doing with it?
On that KV-6... IIRC I used a similar if not that lobe for the exh lobe on a custom Engle solid flat tappet in a 505" I built two years ago. The intake lobe was the same family but something like 268@.050...
What are the intake lobe center lines? Why 113° LSA? Where did the flow numbers come from? A test, or a wish? What castings?
no kidding. thought in the first post I said hypothetical. well see the answer below and do the conversionsAs far as I can tell, he pulled all of this out of his ***! Two cams with very different durations that produce identical dynamic compression in the same engine.....:read2:
first cam somewhere around:One question Z28: WHEN DO YOUR IMAGINARY CAM'S INTAKE LOBE'S CLOSE THE INTAKE VALVE IN RELATION TO THE PISTON?

intake flow:
.100" 170cfm
.200" 190cfm
.300" 220cfm
.400" 250cfm
.450" 265cfm
.500" 280cfm
.550" 260cfm
.600" 210 cfm
exaust flow:
.100" 100cfm
.200" 150cfm
.300" 180cfm
.400" 200cfm
.450" 215cfm
.500" 220cfm
.550" 220cfm
.600" 220cfm
lash is 30/30
if it matters.. dynamic compression would be around 8.5:1
First, in terms of cylinder pressure... The only way to have the same cylinder pressure without changing anything but intake closing event is impossible. The physical cylinder gets sealed at the same time (in degrees), and therefore there will be the same amount of pressure trapped in there. Now this is a little misleading anyway.... as cranking compression is ultra low rpm and there are inertial affects on the airstreams. So as inertia helps, the actual pressures will rise as more "stuff" is put in the same size hole up until the valve seals the cylinder.
Looking at the cams... I wouldnt run either one at 113° LSA. 4" arms have higher pistons speeds and will encourage that inertial affect earlier and get more power with more overlap. I tend to look for 108°-106° LSA on this type of build with an intake center line around 110-112. On the lift... If you reduce the lift taking into account the loss for lifter/pushrod angles and the hydraulics, you're looking to loose around .030-.040 of lift off those. So these two cams are both way under the head's theoretical "sweet spot" and the main flow will be around .350 and with that theoretical cam the piston will have reached the hardest "pull" before the valve has been fully opened. It will run like a truck engine. Add to that the single plane plenum size... this would just be a bunch of mismatch in my opinion. for kicks I ran it thru the PipeMax dyno simulator. it says both cams will make around 375hp, 390tq. That's what I think anyway.
never looked at it like that. thats some good info, thanks moper. i kinda figured those 2 hypothetical cams would makeFirst, in terms of cylinder pressure... The only way to have the same cylinder pressure without changing anything but intake closing event is impossible. The physical cylinder gets sealed at the same time (in degrees), and therefore there will be the same amount of pressure trapped in there. Now this is a little misleading anyway.... as cranking compression is ultra low rpm and there are inertial affects on the airstreams. So as inertia helps, the actual pressures will rise as more "stuff" is put in the same size hole up until the valve seals the cylinder.
Looking at the cams... I wouldnt run either one at 113° LSA. 4" arms have higher pistons speeds and will encourage that inertial affect earlier and get more power with more overlap. I tend to look for 108°-106° LSA on this type of build with an intake center line around 110-112. On the lift... If you reduce the lift taking into account the loss for lifter/pushrod angles and the hydraulics, you're looking to loose around .030-.040 of lift off those. So these two cams are both way under the head's theoretical "sweet spot" and the main flow will be around .350 and with that theoretical cam the piston will have reached the hardest "pull" before the valve has been fully opened. It will run like a truck engine. Add to that the single plane plenum size... this would just be a bunch of mismatch in my opinion. for kicks I ran it thru the PipeMax dyno simulator. it says both cams will make around 375hp, 390tq. That's what I think anyway.
No. Intake center line is where the intake lobe is in realtion to the piston/crank. The higher the number tha sooner the intake valve closes, which helps low end, response, and idle characteristics. LSA, Lobe Seperation Angle, is the distance in degrees between the intake and exh lobe centerlines. Tighter LSA means more overlap with most lobes, and even more on longer duration lobes that are not symmetrical (they open faster than they close). The spec'd 113 means very little overlap with the smaller duration and lift. Some Engine Masters stuff runs the LSA as tight as 93°.
I guess I dont understand what your saying. I dont believe I ever said where I installed the cams in terms of installed center line. Only what the ICL is typically ground on. LSA has nothing to do with ICL or installed ICL. As an example: Let's say I have a cam ground on a 112 intake lobe center line. It has a 108° spread between the intake lobe centerline and the exh lobe center line. I can install it at 110(2° advanced), 106(6° advanced), or 114(2° retarded) and it will still have 108° between the exh lobe centerline and the intake lobe centerline. Intake Center Line is what the cam is ground to. Installed Intake Center Line is where the centerline of that lobe is in relation to the crank/piston position. I apologize if I'm not wording it right.
You're right Lead... I went and double checked myself. I had it backwards. Thanks for clarifying that.