gslender wrote:Dann,
I've made my point about why I think it does improve things. You and wozza both give no explanation as to why it doesn't, suffice saying check it on a dyno.
Boosted air is lost on overlap. That is a fact. Every manufacture does it when releasing a turbo version of their engine. That is a fact.
I'm keen to have you clearly explain why no change to overlap doesn't result in lost air and fuel and overall a negative effect compared to what I've done which reduces this loss.
G
i've explained on several occations that boost isn't a measure of power, only a measure of inlet pressure. If you're measuring purely on boost only, then all you have is a measure of how much restriction you have, not how much air is being passed through the the engine, which is what gives you you're power and nothing to do with the boost reading.
Making the lobe centreline wider, or decreasing overlap which you have done in theory stops air being pushed through on the overlap stroke (wasted out the exhaust valve on the overlap) just the same as it does on an NA engine, only it is exaggerated on a boosted application which is why in general you open up the lobe centreline by around 2-4 degrees given every other engine spec the same.
Bottem line, even though you're boost level has increased doesn't automatically mean your power level has, as explained in other posts. Cam timing and specs is a black art, and every engine varies. You should be dialling your cams via a dyno, NOT via a boost gauge. A dyno is and always has been the only place to correctly find what your engine requires for camshaft timing. I can assure you that your car would have less boost but more power with a decent cylinder head and cams fitted to it. Why?, because it is flowing more air and has less restriction.
Cheers,
Woz