Alex 2550 wrote:* when does the ports become a restriction for cams? For example are the ports to small for +10mm of lift?
The more lift the valve has the more air it can flow. But changing duration has a bigger impact than lift
* when should people start considering solid lifters? For example they want to rev their car to 8,000rpm at the track for multiple laps.
yes anything over 8000, or earlier if you install very high lift / high duration cams, or larger valves.
* when should the valvesprings be upgraded and when should doubles or upgraded singles be used?
Valve springs hold the valve against the cam. So as the max revs and/or the cam ramp angles increase due to lift then so must the springs. I was told by a builder that they now install the heaviest spring rate by default for any serious build. The higher spring rate of the Supertech Duals actually reduce cam wear over lighter springs because it stops any chattering of the valves at high revs. This chattering causes more wear than the increased friction due to the higher spring rate
* when does the standard valves become a restriction? i suspect that valves will offer more restriction than the ports but when does this happen if ever on a "hot" street cam.
They are a restriction as stock, but so is everything else. As you upgrade cams, ported heads etc the valve size becomes a bottle neck and has to be increased too. I actually think exhaust valve on a BP is the biggest restriction and just increasing the exhaust valve size, and adding good headers and an exhaust will work well even on a totally stock engine
* when does the throttle body become a restriction? this would not apply to a street car i believe, again correct if wrong. i think the skunk 2 or similar could be cheap insurance though on bigger cams due to harmonics and the throttle shaft but lets hear from people who know im mearly speculating.
The stock throttle body is never a restriction, however it is a liability. They get changed solely due to the throttle shaft failure rate on high reving engines. Maybe on the highest end builds stepping up to a larger throttle body will help a bit. I'm running a 70mm throttle body because it bolts up to my manifold and shouldn't break...I hope
Really you can think of upgrades like Intake flow, ported heads, bigger valves, bigger cams, larger exhaust headers, free-er exhaust as all being multipliers to power. Change any one and you'll only see a small net effect on power, but increase all of them together and you'll see a compounding multiplication effect to the power. But if any one is left as a bottle neck the gains in all the others are slashed. That's the trick to upgrading cams, it's all got to be done in balance with everything else to get optimal horsepower which is the hardest part. You need to set your goals and work to that target...
Really there are two builds that would be most common dríven around one upgrade due to cost. That is, is the head going to be ported or not. If not then you are targeting a lower end build with 272 degree cams and 10mm lift. Stock valve sizes are maybe ok, but upgrading them 1mm in size might be worthwhile and not that expensive. If you are porting the head, then you are really going the whole hog for max power.
NA8: N/A 200whp | Haltech | Skunk2 Intake | S90 TB | RCP | 5 speed c/r dogbox | 4.78 diff | AST Shocks
Barbs L: 64.12 | S: 58.62 | Collie: 49.72