Dweezle wrote:Hey Mate.
Yeah i am another one bothering you
Just wondering your thoughts on requiring lash caps for a B6?
Do you need these with Hydraulic Lifters?
Camtech have told me to run there Stage 2, basically 265Deg cams, i will need lash caps.
Does this sound right to you?
I can not seem to find a great deal on MX5/Miatas and Lash Caps.
I know you are running solid lifters, how much would i be looking at to do that?
Would that negate the need for Lash Caps?
Again, Sorry if these are dumb questions.
If you have a minute to explain, it would be much appreciated.
Thanks
Name withheld.
PS- AWESOME write up on E85 and tuning.
I just recieved this PM from Dweezle yesterday. I decided as the answer would answer a few questions here I would type it up here for peoples.
Ok so heres a generic picture of a lobe with the parts labelled.
Ill first explain what is done when regrinding a cam.
What we want when we are after bigger cams is greater lift, and greater duration, with possibly a great ramp rate (definately if we go to a solid lifter).
Firstly we can see the base circe (heel) is the non lifting part of the cam, the lifter runs along this part but its only there so that the lifter isnt free airing then suddenly gets smashed by a cam lobe. The nose is where the action happens.
Essentially the entire nose area outside of the base circle is very much like the are under the curve, the bigger this is the more air/fuel is let in and the more power we make. If the nose is taller it will lift the valve open more, this is more lift. If its wider rather than pointier it will have a greater duration. The next image shows what a billet big angry cam would look like (exagerated to make the differences obvious).
Lets start with lift, lift is the Lobe Lift minus base circle RADIUS. you can obviously see that it isnt measured from the centre of the base circle to the tip of the nose. Its the DIFFERENCE between the top and the bottom.
Next is duration, we can see that my new lines start further down the sides of the cam, this is obviously the exact instance the cam starts to lift the valve and the exact moment it closes the valve.
Remember that the cam moves half as fast as the crankshaft, this is because this is a 4 stroke engine. this cam above, lets say its the intake cam, only needs to open once per 2 revolutions so its dríven at half the crankshaft speed. So for this reason the measured duration is doubled.
Eg, the above cam seems to have a duration around 150 degrees, but the crankshaftmoves twice as fast as the cam, so from the crankshafts perspective its open for 300 degrees. So this is a 300 degree cam. (BIG!)
Now we can look at ramp rates, see how my redrawn cam here has a 'wider' nose, obviously it opens the valve much faster and harder than the first cam, this is called ramp rate. if it had the same ramp rate as before it would have a pointier top, and would be open at maximum lift for a shorter duration of time.
The stock hydraulic lifters cant handle a big ramp rate, they work exactly like a shock absorber and a big ramp rate it like hitting big bumps hundreds of times a second, they 'pump down', which means that they move away from the lifter totally by maybe 1 mm or more. thos in effect reduces the lift height and destroys the valvetrain pretty fast.
This is why we go to solids, we can use a bigger ramp rate, get maximum lift for longer, and the whole time the valve is open it will be open slightly more, 5% average more over that time is 5% more power, period.
Now lets look at a regrind
You can see that the base circle has been ground down, and a lift is Lobe Lift MINUS Base circle RADIUS, the total lift has been increased, we can also see that it now has a nice wide top, compared to the original cam. This is where the welding comes into it. Mind you; you can easily use your imagination to see how the duration and ramp rate can be changed simply by removing more base circle.
Ok heres the lash caps bit...
There is no way to move the cam closer to the lifter (the lifter is directly below it 8 one thousandths of an inch away), so with the base circle radius smaller there is now a gap, so to close this gap we have to shim the lifter closer. Solid lifters dont self adjust like hydralics do (hydralics just push out further like a shock absorber) so we have to add a shim to increase their height, they dont adjust at all they are solid.
But when we remove so much material to make a huge cam the factory hydraulic lifters just cant adjust up that much, so we use a lash cap. it sits on top f the lifter and takes up that 1 or 2 mm that have been ground off. Just as a solid lifter has shims, so can hydraulics.
Dann