Rapid Robert
Well-Known Member
360 flat top cast pistons. how do I go about adding valve reliefs. it will be a wild circle track cam so I'm assuming there'll be interference. thank you for your time. RR
We made them with old valves. It's pretty easy.In-Head Piston Cutters Might be cheaper to make a tool. Or the sleazy way, mark it and use a die grinder. What is this wild circle track cam? I don't think I would take those cast pistons much past 6000 rpm. If the cam likes lotsa rpm, you may be better off with something smaller.
You are not required to run a 6k rev limiter. It's 7k.good comprehensive info guys & very much appreciated. A 6K rev limiter is required
The rule has been 7k for about 20 years.You're right they changed it, it IS 7K now
Nice method, like an old school hot rodder, figure it out yourself!I welded a piece of high speed steel to a valve and spun it with a drill to cut reliefs. First I filled the edges of the chamber with a thick layer of vasoline to make cleaning the chips a lot easier. I was real careful to cut them the same depth to keep the balance.
360 flat top cast pistons. how do I go about adding valve reliefs. it will be a wild circle track cam so I'm assuming there'll be interference. thank you for your time. RR
What did you do then?I would have a machine shop do it according to the MP race manuals once you determine what is needed. Make sure they know what they are doing. I had a machine shop in Hampton VA who had not done this before but said he could do it. He did it but none of the pistons afterward would fit into the block bores as he mashed them when mounting for the machining operation. Great day for me...not!
He offered to "make them fit" if I would bring him the block and pistons. No way was I going to do that and so I walked.What did you do then?
Doing it this way will not give the required radial clearance. You will still have to manually grind the radial clearance.yes one time way back I did glue sandpaper to a valve & used it as a grinder, not sure what grit I used. worked good. what grit would you recommend?
Sorry Myron. I missed that you treed me.It would help to know what the minimum amount of material is safe to leave under the deepest part of the relief. Flattops may not have a lot of thickness to accommodate deep valve reliefs and it can vary with the piston material. Lift, cam timing & piston-to-valve clearance are all factors. Exhaust reliefs often need to be deeper.
Dirt track stuff usually has options where you can buy a competitor's engine dirt cheap, so they don't build 20K engines. loli don't want to put you off but...... surely if you'll be using a 'wild circle track cam' you should use decent performance capable pistons? i know from past experience cast pistons don't like repeated high revs, they break. now if the plan is for a car to pose in that won't see the high revving potential of that cam then most machine shops will be able to machine valve reliefs for you. have you checked the pistons will even get close enough to the deck at tdc to even worry? you may not need the valve reliefs at all if the pistons are down in the hole a bunch.
neil.
Claim is unlikely. Lots of hurdles and hoops for a claim to happen in this scenario.Dirt track stuff usually has options where you can buy a competitor's engine dirt cheap, so they don't build 20K engines. lol
Call this guy: In-Head Piston Cutters360 flat top cast pistons. how do I go about adding valve reliefs. it will be a wild circle track cam so I'm assuming there'll be interference. thank you for your time. RR