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Cam timing and interference engines
Valve timing should not affect clearance between valveheads and pistons at
TDC. Valve lift definitely makes a difference. The two should not be confused.
Valve timing is far more influential in terms of performance gains on
street engines. Valve lift is considerably more difficult to change
reliably without changing such things as the valve springs. Unfortunately,
regrinding the existing cam often increases valve lift as the usual
technique is to regrind the heel of the cam, and perhaps reprofile the ramp
of the cam a tad. It is far better to get a proper custom cam grind from
a new billet preserving the original maximum lift, but improving the
ramping and increasing duration and valve overlap.
Unfortunately, there's no free lunch unless you can graft on one of the new
variable valve timing mechanisms. I'm referring to the V V T systems which
change valve timing at around 3-4,000 rpm, not the emission driven intake
retard systems used on the later Spider 4. The latest V V T systems can
also vary lift.
For the V6 I am sceptical about putting S cams on an L engine for example.
If all you do is gain 4 lb ft of torque at higher rpm, and another 10 or so
hp at peak output rpm (around 5,500 rpm) and give up lower end torque, the
L with it's taller final drive will probably accelerate less well. The
extra hp might not even produce much difference at top speed either.
Already capable of 240 km/hr what is the advantage in NA to a car that
might do 250 km/hr (that would be a big gain for only 5% more power)?
Changing valve timing invariably detracts from some aspect of engine
performance, usually low end torque is sacrificed for higher end torque,
which produces more power due to the rpm multiplier. Often this makes the
car slower in normal street traffic.
The Honda 2000 is a case in point. Even with a very sophisticated V V T the
240 hp is only developed at close to 8,000 rpm. Peak torque is only a few
thousand rpm lower (at around 6-7,000 I think) so the engine is a bit of a
dog around town. 2,000 cc is only capable of generating so much torque at
any given rpm, even with the most sophisticated engine management and
clever valve gear. As for adding Weber carbs, careful thought is required
before fiddling with factory specs on cam timing. Only rarely should
increasing valve lift be viewed as a suitable modification, given all the
alternative choices.
Cheers everyone
Michael Smith
Calgary, Alberta
Canada
91 Alfa 164L, White, original owner
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