dazedand confused
Well-Known Member
Yes they have been decked
This engine has stock non adjustable rockers.
The factory push rods are the same length but not width
"Assuming you have an adjustable valvetrain........ how far can you crack the intake valve off the seat by removing any lash, and going a bit further...... before the compression tester shows “zero” compression?"Here’s a question regarding the on line cranking compression calculators......
Or something you can try when you’ve got the compression tester out.....
"Assuming you have an adjustable valvetrain........ how far can you crack the intake valve off the seat by removing any lash, and going a bit further...... before the compression tester shows “zero” compression?"
For example, if you tag a valve by over reving the engine and tweak it a little...... the compression reading is lower, but unless it’s severely bent, it’s not showing “zero”.
Yet, a bent valve never completely “closes”.
What’s the point of this?
My feeling is........ with cams that have extremely slow closing ramps, some compression starts to build before the valve is actually “seated”.
The valve is closing, the piston is ascending....... and if the piston is displacing more area than can squeeze through the small opening the almost seated valve has provided, some pressure will start to build.
So, if you tested two cams with the same exact actual closing points, but had radically different closing ramps(one really slow vs one that just slams the valve down), they would show different readings on the compression tester.
Although the calculation would say the cranking pressure would be the same.
It’s the same reason that a 292* cam could have 20* of vacuum.
The number of overlap degrees might be large, but the area under the overlap curve is still rather small because the valves aren’t open very far.
This 292/292-112 cam has the same overlap as the MP 484 cam, which is 284/284-108. Both have 68*.
Think that 484 cam would idle at 20” in this 318?
Yes, I agree with the numbers.... Here is one that looks pretty much 'at the top', but is actually down .016". So without measurements, or a piston PN and any info on the block being decked, we don't really know.If that info is correct, it’s only 9:1 if the heads are 73 cc’s.
My feeling is........ with cams that have extremely slow closing ramps, some compression starts to build before the valve is actually “seated”.
The valve is closing, the piston is ascending....... and if the piston is displacing more area than can squeeze through the small opening the almost seated valve has provided, some pressure will start to build.
So, if you tested two cams with the same exact actual closing points, but had radically different closing ramps(one really slow vs one that just slams the valve down), they would show different readings on the compression tester.
Although the calculation would say the cranking pressure would be the same.
It’s the same reason that a 292* cam could have 20* of vacuum.
The number of overlap degrees might be large, but the area under the overlap curve is still rather small because the valves aren’t open very far.
This 292/292-112 cam has the same overlap as the MP 484 cam, which is 284/284-108. Both have 68*.
Think that 484 cam would idle at 20” in this 318?
This engine has stock non adjustable rockers. I bought a chrome gauge from a speed shop that works off of vaccum " fuel saver" with color coded face plate to adjust: distributor, idle, fuel/air screws on carb to get the maximum efficiency in performance and fuel economy. It was reading 20 while engine was running? I didn't know if this is the same vaccum test you guys where talking about?
I run a BIG mechanical and a holley red electric with an edelbrock thunder AVS with the big needle and seats which is a copy of the Carter AVS. To much fuel pressure can sink the floats. The issue only shows up really at idle. My guess is it is not sinking the floats at idle. If not, the regulator is not needed and can create a host of problems especially if it is an inexpensive holley reg.Stock pumps like mine have been known to put out more then 6 psi and edelbrock/Carter 4 barrel carbs should no more then 6 psi running through them even at high RPM
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So without measurements, or a piston PN and any info on the block being decked, we don't really know.
Yes, those are the typical deck height numbers. A piston PN would go along way to clear things up. What is it we're trying to figure out again?I agree.
From what I could find, the taller flat top, no valve pocket 318 pistons are basically 1.74ch...... which would require the block be cut .060 for zero deck height.
And, that could easily be enough to warrant a shorter pushrod, especially if the heads have been milled, valve job, etc.
On the other side, the cam has more lift, so the base circle should theoretically be lower...... which helps with the pushrod situation.
Lots of unknowns here.