Desk Top Dyno

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If you have a .640 lift cam first of all you have to subtract lash and deflection so let’s say you have a .615 lift cam. How many times does a cam hit .615 each cycle. How many times does it hit .300, .400, .500 each cycle.
I thought maybe it was somethin like that. Thank you drive through.
 
I'm no head porter and know little about porting and flow but I have a question. Let's say you have a camshaft with .640 lift. WHY do flow numbers at say .300 even matter? Help me understand.
In addition…. The fatter the flow curve the better the power return. On high performance and race cams, the goal is to lift the valve as high as the head can flow the air and let it sit there while the engine is going down the air. The better the low lift is the better the cylinder fills not just at the low lift points but it helps move more air and fuel sooner and hopefully a good ramming effect dynamic is also taking place with more air and fuel being drawn in with a larger amount sooner.

Most head porters and racers will seek this because they know this will add power from the fatter air and fuel curve it brings in. Some will say it’s really not a whole lot and there is a certain amount of truth to it but it is that stack up the little things and add them up deal. The cylinder heads ability to move air is a known super key area and the sooner you move more air and fuel the merrier it will be.
 
Still patiently waiting to see you post an ET slip. All of these 8-9-10 second engine builds posted and I haven’t seen one from the “Scientist” yet. It’s like a Unicorn.


Keep waiting. Time slips don’t mean ****, unless you are in a corner and can’t defend what you do.

Pretty childish that you call out Brett Miller for not posting time slips.

Stop talking like jpar and grow up.
 
Explain this please
So you don't choose what lifts your gonna measure at ?

The lift most use became the de facto standard but you could use any random other points you find logical or not, or am I way off base here ?


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So you don't choose what lifts your gonna measure at ?

The lift most use became the de facto standard but you could use any random other points you find logical or not.

Most people look for the industry standard of .100-.700 on heads like these and .1000 on W8 and W9 heads. I prefer to go .050 after .300 because that gives me info I can use. I flowed a customers heads yesterday and gave him numbers up to .700 as he’s running a .700 lift cam but I ran it up to .750 to see how I did and give me info.
 
Once again, they are what they are and they did what they did as far as it could be done by someone who knows something on the subject.

You on the other hand can’t seem to stop boasting and belittling the cylinder head and won’t prove yourself but just take shots at the head and the porter.





Another face less super head porter trashing another well known guys work and blowing my mind over how self indulgent he is in self gratification on crushing another guys work with nothing to back himself up with but smart *** replies dumping heaps of criticism.
1) Not once did I "boast"
2) If You want to see My face a**hole, it's in the cat pics thread.
3) Not once did I "belittle", "trash", or anything like it on that head. In fact, if somebody uses a valve job that makes it difficult to achieve good flow at that lift, it shows that is as good as a well done factory head despite that fact.
4) The #'s I posted were from My Buddy's AAR 'Cuda, which actually had a Rotomaster Turbo kit on it when purchased, and when I did them. They were flowed by another shop for those #'s, & EQ's w/1.92's actually flow a few more than that, & the MP Eddys flow 1/2 a dozen more..both OOTB...so I'm hardly crowing. In the end, the car was switched back to a proper 6bbl setup. A real car, with real timeslips, not a trailer queen, with way less squeeze than it should have for a 292°PShaft & ran 12.35-12.45@109.
5) You triggered telling Me to "go brag to Brett", lol, WTF Dude...Your reading comprehension is the one that's lacking, when I said "& no, We are not racing flow benches" I meant it, apparently that's beyond Your "comprehension".
 
Most people look for the industry standard of .100-.700 on heads like these and .1000 on W8 and W9 heads. I prefer to go .050 after .300 because that gives me info I can use. I flowed a customers heads yesterday and gave him numbers up to .700 as he’s running a .700 lift cam but I ran it up to .750 to see how I did and give me info.
That’s the way to do it! Keep checking. I like the every .050 check. It paints a bigger and better picture of what’s going on.
:thumbsup:


1) Not once did I "boast"
2) If You want to see My face a**hole, it's in the cat pics thread.
3) Not once did I "belittle", "trash", or anything like it on that head. In fact, if somebody uses a valve job that makes it difficult to achieve good flow at that lift, it shows that is as good as a well done factory head despite that fact.
4) The #'s I posted were from My Buddy's AAR 'Cuda, which actually had a Rotomaster Turbo kit on it when purchased, and when I did them. They were flowed by another shop for those #'s, & EQ's w/1.92's actually flow a few more than that, & the MP Eddys flow 1/2 a dozen more..both OOTB...so I'm hardly crowing. In the end, the car was switched back to a proper 6bbl setup. A real car, with real timeslips, not a trailer queen, with way less squeeze than it should have for a 292°PShaft & ran 12.35-12.45@109.
5) You triggered telling Me to "go brag to Brett", lol, WTF Dude...Your reading comprehension is the one that's lacking, when I said "& no, We are not racing flow benches" I meant it, apparently that's beyond Your "comprehension".

Oh My Lord your still yammmering on and on!

Truly LMAO @ the reply.

Just so you understand, I did t bother reading your dribble and I just moved on.

You - are - sooooooo stupid it’s silly.

The above post is proof you can not understand reading comprehension and just can’t let it go you’re so twisted up and butt hurt. Your sooooooo lost it’s amazing.

:rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
That’s the way to do it! Keep checking. I like the every .050 check. It paints a bigger and better picture of what’s going on.
:thumbsup:




Oh My Lord your still yammmering on and on!

Truly LMAO @ the reply.

Just so you understand, I did t bother reading your dribble and I just moved on.

You - are - sooooooo stupid it’s silly.

The above post is proof you can not understand reading comprehension and just can’t let it go you’re so twisted up and butt hurt. Your sooooooo lost it’s amazing.

:rofl::rofl::rofl:
I thought You were "done with this guy"
:rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
If you have a .640 lift cam first of all you have to subtract lash and deflection so let’s say you have a .615 lift cam. How many times does a cam hit .615 each cycle. How many times does it hit .300, .400, .500 each cycle.
John, since a flow bench is just really for air flow improvement or correction and basic " tell what a head has for cfm", what kinda flow numbers do you think a bench would show if the camshaft lobe was involved, opening on its particular ramp, and at speed ?
Because I see guys on there flow bench running a particular lift for 10 seconds or longer, a valve isn't open at that particular lift for longer than, id guess way less than a second. I imagine the entire lobe -valve lift is done before .050 of a second ( wild *** guess)
Probably need some high speed cameras and other cool stuff to test like that. It seems that would be a more real world test.
Do you know or heard of anyone trying to test like this ?
 
John, since a flow bench is just really for air flow improvement or correction and basic " tell what a head has for cfm", what kinda flow numbers do you think a bench would show if the camshaft lobe was involved, opening on its particular ramp, and at speed ?
Because I see guys on there flow bench running a particular lift for 10 seconds or longer, a valve isn't open at that particular lift for longer than, id guess way less than a second. I imagine the entire lobe -valve lift is done before .050 of a second ( wild *** guess)
Probably need some high speed cameras and other cool stuff to test like that. It seems that would be a more real world test.
Do you know or heard of anyone trying to test like this ?


Way above my pay grade buddy. Lol
 
Sorry, I didn’t get to sit down with my laptop and mess with the flow numbers like requested. Might be tomorrow before I do.

On the topic of port flow numbers and my version of Desktop Dyno 2000, I know it does some extrapolation of things like cam info, so I suspect it does the same with the port flow numbers. I can plug in numbers at certain values but no idea what it does if the valve lift exceeds those numbers or what it uses between them. My guess is that it extends the curve if the lift exceeds the entered numbers. But if the flow numbers end just before the numbers “drop off” ( :D ) I bet it gets it wrong. So, in this case the more info the better and if they include the 0.050 data points even better.

I have the manual for my copy of DD and it talked about the extrapolation of the shape of the cam lobe and how DD is going to give a more accurate result if the advertised numbers are entered. I was going to review the manual again to see if it said anything about the port flow numbers but have done so yet.

On a note about the terminology of “drop off”, I find it funny that in my mind the term was used correctly for port flow numbers that only gained 5 or 6 cfm between points. The increase of cfm “dropped off” at that point. If it had lost flow, then I would have said it “lost flow”. But I am no head porter nor am I an engine builder so not arguing that my terminology is correct, only that it was how I thought about it. :)
 
John, since a flow bench is just really for air flow improvement or correction and basic " tell what a head has for cfm", what kinda flow numbers do you think a bench would show if the camshaft lobe was involved, opening on its particular ramp, and at speed ?
Because I see guys on there flow bench running a particular lift for 10 seconds or longer, a valve isn't open at that particular lift for longer than, id guess way less than a second. I imagine the entire lobe -valve lift is done before .050 of a second ( wild *** guess)
Probably need some high speed cameras and other cool stuff to test like that. It seems that would be a more real world test.
Do you know or heard of anyone trying to test like this ?
Probably easier to read the air flow during a dyno run and divide by 8 to figure real world cfm for each cylinder.
 
Probably easier to read the air flow during a dyno run and divide by 8 to figure real world cfm for each cylinder.
Good idea, Yeah that was something I was also thinking about.
 
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