So, I have seen numbers of 25" of water, 28", etc. Work uses 62mBar (25")
What is recommended for pressure and why?
What is recommended for pressure and why?
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25" is fine, the correction factor for the reading @25"H2O is × 1.0583 to get the common @28"H2O value.So, I have seen numbers of 25" of water, 28", etc. Work uses 62mBar (25")
What is recommended for pressure and why?
I am mostly curious as to never having flowed heads before and these have been worked over. I know you can mess a set up by just hogging them out without knowledge of how air flows. I do enjoy the Youtube Channel Bain Racing, he does a great jobTry not to get lost in the idea of chasing flow numbers.
Bigger flow numbers don’t always equate to higher power output.
I have heard it said, if the flow isn't butchered, you can typically double the CFM and that is the HP it can support. What are your thoughts on that?Imo, for a NA 470, 440-1’s with 2.25” valves flowing in the 350’s are plenty big enough for you to reach your power level goals.
2hp per cfm is consider a reasonable goal/capability even if the head is less than stellar, with the right parts you should be able to get there, Pro Stock heads can get like 2.5 hp per cfm, but most street performance engines fall into 1.4 to 1.8 hp per cfm some getting into the 2's. With enough cam and cr should be able to get 2hp per cfm.I have heard it said, if the flow isn't butchered, you can typically double the CFM and that is the HP it can support. What are your thoughts on that?
I know it would have to be much higher than 28" but if the standard is 28, then that is best to use, I think. I read some things where Ford was using 60" when fine tuning ports back in the day. One article said 100" to pick up the finest of changes. So, there seems to be a correlation between pressure and fine tuning what you are changing.As far as what pressure is best? I’d say whichever pressure simulates the conditions the port will see in a running engine. But we all know how dynamic the airflow in a port can be at different rpm ranges and loads so
you can typically double the CFM and that is the HP it can support
People used to use 3" and 10" back in the day and did great things, pretty sure Bob Mullen was using 3" when designing W2's.I know it would have to be much higher than 28" but if the standard is 28, then that is best to use, I think. I read some things where Ford was using 60" when fine tuning ports back in the day. One article said 100" to pick up the finest of changes. So, there seems to be a correlation between pressure and fine tuning what you are changing.
Yet they failed miserably trying to do a duplicate treatise to a B/RB head,..... & I thought Mullin used 5 & 9 inches. I'd have to go back to those 'old' books & check again tho'. Smokey did so much extensive testing with His shop partner, & discovered that once You achieved the velocities created by 28"H2O, it always correlated to track performance........more flow @28", more power/speed on the track, and once He declared this 'rule', almost everybody followed it....'cause He was Smokey. We know more now for sure, but it's not a bad rule, just an incomplete one.People used to use 3" and 10" back in the day and did great things, pretty sure Bob Mullen was using 3" when designing W2's.
I'm just saying 3" is better than noneYet they failed miserably trying to do a duplicate treatise to a B/RB head,..... & I thought Mullin used 5 & 9 inches. I'd have to go back to those 'old' books & check again tho'. Smokey did so much extensive testing with His shop partner, & discovered that once You achieved the velocities created by 28"H2O, it always correlated to track performance........more flow @28", more power/speed on the track, and once He declared this 'rule', almost everybody followed it....'cause He was Smokey. We know more now for sure, but it's not a bad rule, just an incomplete one.
I mean porting without any kind of bench, I don't know if the OP has one, building one or whatever, but if all he can afford is a shop vac or two using the block as a bench to professional one that can do 28" plus at his needed flow, something is better than nothing.Since pressure is defined as resistance to flow, then if you have none……then you have none.
We are going to flow test at work. We have a Superflow Bench. Not sure the capabilities until next week. Not my department, so I need to wait for them.I mean porting without any kind of bench, I don't know if the OP has one, building one or whatever, but if all he can afford is a shop vac or two using the block as a bench to professional one that can do 28" plus at his needed flow, something is better than nothing.
You also have the opposite problem, too much air speed.If you're just looking for flow that means nothing without knowing the air speed. A little less opening can increase air speed. We put a little bit of clay on the bottom of my Hemi ports and it increased flow and air speed. Give your heads to someone doing good competition work, such as stock and superstock heads and you should get good results.
My first experience with having my heads flowed was pretty cool, I was surprised how long it took to get up to 28 once the valve got opened up to .750On a Superflow bench, pulling 400 cfm at 28” depression takes almost 30 amps at 230 volts. If you double the depression to 56”, the flow would theoretically increase by 42%, but the power required to move the air would nearly triple. That means close to 90 amps. That’s lots of equipment cost and lots of electricity cost.
As Killer6 said, Smokey determined that 28” on the bench correlated pretty well with the running engine.