In the end I wonder, how much difference there is between 1/2 and 2/3. At what level of valve train stress would you have to be at for the difference between the two to be significant enough to matter? I don't know.
I have some data using a stock Speedmaster head with PRW 1.6 rocker arm. Test was done to compare the actual valve lift of an uncorrected shaft location to a corrected shaft location. I want to redo the test before posting the data to make sure I'm posting correct information. I'll try to do that soon.In the end I wonder, how much difference there is between 1/2 and 2/3. At what level of valve train stress would you have to be at for the difference between the two to be significant enough to matter? I don't know.
I think the answer to that question is, it depends on the application and even then there may be some disagreement depending on where you place your priorities. For another opinion on rocker arm geometry check out Billy Godbolds book " High performance cams and valve trains" Chapter 2 discusses rocker arms. It's a great read. Billy breaks it down in text, pictures and diagrams to help understand. Sorry if I sound like a commercial.
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Well, dang near every V8 Mopar made has bad valve train geometry and they didn't break. But neither did they push the boundaries regarding valve train.
Where is was struggling at 5800ish and was miserable at 6100, now it will zip right up to 6900.
It’s amazing to me that in this day and age of nearly unlimited information that someone could assemble a pile of parts that were that unhappy together.
It’s pretty rare for me to encounter a valvetrain that just shuts down like that…….. other than stuff where the Hyd lifters are giving up(collapsing).
Maybe I’m just not getting deep enough into the back of the lobe catalog![]()
I’m sure you deal with a higher end clientele than I do. Or most of us for that matter.Maybe I’m just not getting deep enough into the back of the lobe catalog![]()
Who selected the combo of stuff that wasn’t happy?Well, it’s a bit of a funky build. I’ll leave it at that.
Who selected the combo of stuff that wasn’t happy?
Anything stand out with the cam lobes?
They want power and rpm but not the manners that comes with that.
When a customer wants the torque and power peaks 3k apart
Without variable cam timing and excellent modern technology type heads…….. or a centrifugal s/c……..it’s just not going to happen.
Did you know what components had been used before you tested it, or was that after the fact knowledge?
Or, was it getting tested because problems had already materialized in the car?
Like the brohams say, "put da nitrogen on it"I knew what it was going together.
It’s on the dyno again because the first time it had the valve train issues and I didn’t have time to do anything about it then. So he took it home and was going to try and make an event.
When that didn’t happen it came back here to see for himself what it was doing, and so I could fix it.
Thats fixed now, but the power and torque numbers aren’t bad but they are a bit skimpy. I’m not sure there is 30 hp left to be found at this point.
I’m waiting on some other stuff that should be shipping later this week to finish it. At that point it will be what it is, unless he wants to try a different grind.
Like the brohams say, "put da nitrogen on it"
This ended up being a surprising test. The idea was to compare actual valve motion of a stock head (ended up being ProMaxx) to the same head with the rocker shaft relocated to a 'corrected' mid-lift position. Rocker arm was PRW stainless 1.6 ratio. See the first two pictures for the set-up. A solid (epoxy filled) lifter was used against a cam rotated such that the lifter was on base circle. Gage blocks were placed between the cam and the lifter to simulate valve lift. Actual valve lift was recorded from a digital indicator placed on top of the rocker roller tip.I have some data using a stock Speedmaster head with PRW 1.6 rocker arm. Test was done to compare the actual valve lift of an uncorrected shaft location to a corrected shaft location. I want to redo the test before posting the data to make sure I'm posting correct information. I'll try to do that soon.
Nice work. Did you try changing to a cup adjuster and using the longest pushrod you can?This ended up being a surprising test. The idea was to compare actual valve motion of a stock head (ended up being ProMaxx) to the same head with the rocker shaft relocated to a 'corrected' mid-lift position. Rocker arm was PRW stainless 1.6 ratio. See the first two pictures for the set-up. A solid (epoxy filled) lifter was used against a cam rotated such that the lifter was on base circle. Gage blocks were placed between the cam and the lifter to simulate valve lift. Actual valve lift was recorded from a digital indicator placed on top of the rocker roller tip.
Conventional thinking says that by raising the rocker shaft and moving it away from the valve a more proper geometry will result which will give the following benefits: Less roller tip sweep across the top of the valve, increased total valve lift, increased acceleration of the valve off the seat, decreased velocity of the valve over the nose. Interesting which of those proved correct.
The yellow paper shows the results of tests. The 'Valve Lift' column shows the actual valve lift at each cam lift increment. The rocker ratio is cumulative rocker ratio which is the total valve lift divided by the total cam lift, line by line. The 'Relative Velocity' column is similar, except it is the change in valve lift divided by the change in cam lift. For instance, between 0.100 and 0.150 cam lift (a change of 0.050") on the stock head, the valve moved from 0.161 to 0.241 (a change of 0.080"). 0.080 divided by 0.050 = 1.60. This number gives a 'relative velocity' number that tells how much the valve moved during that lift increment. It's more like an instantaneous velocity compared to the rocker ratio which is like an overall average velocity. That number is useful for comparing velocity of the valve off the seat or at any other location in the lift cycle.
The results are quite surprising. I did this test over and over again over the course of 3 days to make sure it was correct. I didn't understand what was going on until I added the cam, lifter and pushrod to the drawings. As can be seen from the last two drawings, relocating the rocker shaft away from the valve increased the misalignment of the pushrod and lifter from an average of 14.71 deg to 15.45 deg. This negatively affects the geometry on the pushrod side of the rocker so much that the valve motion suffers.
As can be seen there are some discrepancies between the actual measured data on the yellow paper and on the 'predicted' numbers from the CAD drawn papers. For instance, the CAD drawing predicts a valve lift of 0.670" at 0.430" of cam lift. Actual measured valve lift was 0.678". For the 'Corrected' head the CAD drawing predicted 0.668" and the actual measured value was 0.665". The point of the CAD drawings is not so much to come up with the exact same numbers as measured as it is to explain why the relocated shaft gave surprising results.
The geometry on the valve side of the rocker arm is a little less complex than the pushrod side. Fixing the geometry on one side alone can lead to unforeseen problems on the other side.
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This ended up being a surprising test. The idea was to compare actual valve motion of a stock head (ended up being ProMaxx) to the same head with the rocker shaft relocated to a 'corrected' mid-lift position. Rocker arm was PRW stainless 1.6 ratio. See the first two pictures for the set-up. A solid (epoxy filled) lifter was used against a cam rotated such that the lifter was on base circle. Gage blocks were placed between the cam and the lifter to simulate valve lift. Actual valve lift was recorded from a digital indicator placed on top of the rocker roller tip.
Conventional thinking says that by raising the rocker shaft and moving it away from the valve a more proper geometry will result which will give the following benefits: Less roller tip sweep across the top of the valve, increased total valve lift, increased acceleration of the valve off the seat, decreased velocity of the valve over the nose. Interesting which of those proved correct.
The yellow paper shows the results of tests. The 'Valve Lift' column shows the actual valve lift at each cam lift increment. The rocker ratio is cumulative rocker ratio which is the total valve lift divided by the total cam lift, line by line. The 'Relative Velocity' column is similar, except it is the change in valve lift divided by the change in cam lift. For instance, between 0.100 and 0.150 cam lift (a change of 0.050") on the stock head, the valve moved from 0.161 to 0.241 (a change of 0.080"). 0.080 divided by 0.050 = 1.60. This number gives a 'relative velocity' number that tells how much the valve moved during that lift increment. It's more like an instantaneous velocity compared to the rocker ratio which is like an overall average velocity. That number is useful for comparing velocity of the valve off the seat or at any other location in the lift cycle.
The results are quite surprising. I did this test over and over again over the course of 3 days to make sure it was correct. I didn't understand what was going on until I added the cam, lifter and pushrod to the drawings. As can be seen from the last two drawings, relocating the rocker shaft away from the valve increased the misalignment of the pushrod and lifter from an average of 14.71 deg to 15.45 deg. This negatively affects the geometry on the pushrod side of the rocker so much that the valve motion suffers.
As can be seen there are some discrepancies between the actual measured data on the yellow paper and on the 'predicted' numbers from the CAD drawn papers. For instance, the CAD drawing predicts a valve lift of 0.670" at 0.430" of cam lift. Actual measured valve lift was 0.678". For the 'Corrected' head the CAD drawing predicted 0.668" and the actual measured value was 0.665". The point of the CAD drawings is not so much to come up with the exact same numbers as measured as it is to explain why the relocated shaft gave surprising results.
The geometry on the valve side of the rocker arm is a little less complex than the pushrod side. Fixing the geometry on one side alone can lead to unforeseen problems on the other side.
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The set-up is ball-ball pushrod and cup adjuster. I ran the initial tests with the adjuster 1 turn from the seated position. This morning I bottomed out the adjuster and increased the PR length to compensate. Results shown.Nice work. Did you try changing to a cup adjuster and using the longest pushrod you can?
PRW rockers were purchased in 2025.The pushrod side is at best a nasty compromise.
Edit: how old are those PRW rockers?
Mine are old enough that they are not the upgraded version.
Edit II: do you mind doing the test with real valve springs instead of checking springs? It will change the ratio and I’m wondering how shaft position may affect it. In other words, is the loss on ratio the same with different springs.
What are your thoughts on that?
I don't see how the SBM runs as well as it does with that misalignment, especially at high RPM. R blocks and Ritter blocks have the lifter bores at 48 degrees which is perfect. A line drawn through the cam centerline and the rocker adjuster cup is a 48 degree line. The 59 degree lifter angle was a hold-over from the 318 poly block. I guess Chrysler didn't have enough money or time to get it right.How does the ridiculous lifter to pushrod angle play in all of this? If the lifter bores were say 45 degrees, would any of this geometry be "better" so to speak? It's something I've always asked WHY did Chrysler cast blocks like that?
Lol, next You get to find & try a W2 setup,...non-linear in 2 planes by quite a bit ...I don't see how the SBM runs as well as it does with that misalignment, especially at high RPM. R blocks and Ritter blocks have the lifter bores at 48 degrees which is perfect. A line drawn through the cam centerline and the rocker adjuster cup is a 48 degree line. The 59 degree lifter angle was a hold-over from the 318 poly block. I guess Chrysler didn't have enough money or time to get it right.
PRW rockers were purchased in 2025.
Changing to real springs would be a challenge and a totally different set-up. It would be tough to do with the gage blocks - how would you compress the spring to change the blocks? If a real cam was used to lift the valve then measuring actual lifter movement is more complicated. What changes would you expect to see? Only difference I would expect are those associated with load and deflection. Can't see that being much in a static situation (non-running engine).