Earlie A
Well-Known Member
You win.This is your camshaft on soft rock
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You win.This is your camshaft on soft rock
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I can't swear to it, but I'm pretty sure that all round and rectangular aluminum stock, or "billet", are extruded. The only difference between bar stock from SpeedyMetals and the Crane rockers is the shape of the die the aluminum was pushed through, as long as the starting alloy is the same. Extruding to near net shape is a savings of machining time, but the general material properties would be the same unless there was some exotic heat treat cycle required. Billet aluminum is cast into a big block (billet) but then heated and extruded to the round, square, hollow, etc shape that the end user needs. It isn't like forged vs cast steel, where the grains structure and strength of a forging are significantly stronger.
I don't disagree with you but then I also don't understand how the BB guys are using aluminum main caps as an upgrade in high HP builds.
Rigidity is usually but not always a good thing. I was a reliability engineer for ten years before retirement and did a lot of Long Term Reliability and HALT testing (Highly Accelerated Life Testing) on a variety of products. It was a lot of fun and we beat the **** out of everything and the engineers always complained that nothing could survive, but that was the point. Find the failure modes in a short amount of time. Anyway, you would be surprised what resonant frequency can do to a supposedly rigid design. Sometimes, adding compliance and altering the natural frequency is a better idea. There are always caveats though, and in a mechanical system like the SBM valvetrain, less flex is generally going to be better at the higher stress levels.
I've always wondered how much a thicker rocker shaft of the right heat treated material would increase stiffness of the system. With pushrod oiling, you could run a solid shaft no? Solid should be more resistant to flex between the hold downs with strong springs. On the other hand, I would have thought it's been tried before and if it isn't popular, maybe the difference is insignificant.
I was just thinking about some of this same stuff as far as resonant frequency goes. More stiffness should raise the resonant frequency. More mass should lower it. Would take a lot of high level testing to find out which is best.
I've looked at some bending/stiffness properties of hollow shafts vs solid shafts vs smaller diameter shafts. Solid is certainly stronger than hollow but not by much. It's the OD and the distance between supports that has the most effect. That's part of the reason a rigid, wide steel cap makes the most sense to me. Reduce the span.
Reducing the diameter of the shaft gives a rocker arm manufacturer more flexibility to design a strong rocker arm. A 7/8 shaft and a 1.5"+ spring make for a thin rocker arm.
Lots of good info here. I’ll add something though, I bet I could count on one hand the number of guys here with more than .700 net lift. And I’d bet I could count on one hand the number of guys here that make power over 6500 rpm. And we have a crap ton of members. So that, in my mind at least begs the question, is all this theory worth putting to practice for the 90 percentile? I sure went through a lot of effort setting up my w2 stuff to make sure it was dead nuts and I’m not even sure that was necessary. But I definitely wont worry about spinning it 7500 with 20 pounds of boost. So maybe it was worth it just to give me the warm and fuzzy feelings inside.
What makes Mancini rockers correct? Do they have to be on a TF head?Exactly. That’s why I want the valve off the seat as fast as it will tolerate the speed because these engines are under valved and port area deficient.
And that’s a 340 inches.
I’ve seen enough engines with bad geometry and broken parts to know that any aftermarket rocker needs a correction with the exception of TF heads and Mancini rockers.
Other than that, they need to be corrected. In fact I have to call Mike today.
What makes Mancini rockers correct? Do they have to be on a TF head?
TF recommends the Harland Sharp systems for the small block heads. Harland Sharp makes some of Mancini's rockers so the Mancini stuff may be the same.
The Mancini rockers for SBM list a max spring diameter of 1.65". The Harland Sharp roller bearing rockers have a maximum spring diameter of 1.50". This would mean the HS is 0.150" thicker in the spring relief area. The roller bearing thickness is 0.125". As can be seen in the first picture below, the HS rocker (for TF head) even has extra metal between the two roller bearings.
The second picture below is an old Mopar Performance (by Crane) rocker compared to a HS roller rocker. If ultimate strength is the criteria, my money would be on the orange one.
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I'm pretty sure Randy told me they went from dual 1/2" wide rollers to dual 3/8" wide rollers and that solved the problems.
And oil pressure.Humph....give me a bushing anyday
That's 0.125" per side.Hmmmmmm
Edit: Thats .0625 per side. That not a lot.
By Joe I think you get/got it.You want the fastest speed off the seat, the slowest speed over the nose and the narrowest sweep pattern.
Why would anyone want the valve to be slow off the seat and fast over the nose where all the flow is?
That's 0.125" per side.
Lot of good info in this post.I thought the compressive forces of drawing (or pushing I forget how it’s done…maybe it’s both ways) the bar stock through successive dies changed the grain structure or probably more correctly lets the grain flow bend and shape around the part, making it stronger than if rocker or whatever part was machined from a round or whatever shape of materiel you start with rather than just machining it.
Do I have that correct?