Cam Design...
I have been testing various cams (off-the-shelf cams and home-built) with Engine Analyzer Pro for my future "427" L-92 build and getting mixed results. Supposedly, altering the LSA should be making much more difference than what the program shows, I'm not seeing but maybe 2-3% change from 102 to 114. And it seems like whatever grind numbers I use always make max power at 6000 and max torque at 5000 (that's about where I want it, however), just not understanding why it doesn't move up the RPM range when plugging in larger numbers.
My main question is this, do I want to be looking for the best "average" HP & torque numbers regardless of the peaks? So far, I've been looking strictly at the AVG numbers.
Is there anything else I should be considering besides what the different specs do to my dynamic CR & knock index since changing the specs are not affecting the RPM range?
I have an adjustable valvetrain, would it be worth the gains by going to a solid roller even with a 6500 RPM max?
The thing about solid rollers is they're more responsive on the street. You can increase @0.050 duration 8-10º and get the same idle quality with more rpm capability and less chance of valvetrain hysterisis at higher rpm.
I haven't run a hydraulic in a max effort street build in a long time. The new 'street' solids are just too much fun and with the right parts, they'll last a long time with very little/no maintenance.
https://ls1tech.com/forums/6299673-post34.html
The thing about solid rollers is they're more responsive on the street. You can increase @0.050 duration 8-10º and get the same idle quality with more rpm capability and less chance of valvetrain hysterisis at higher rpm.
I haven't run a hydraulic in a max effort street build in a long time. The new 'street' solids are just too much fun and with the right parts, they'll last a long time with very little/no maintenance.
Trending Topics
The Best V8 Stories One Small Block at Time
trying 2b sarcastic....just asking. For off idle torque and drivability then yes
average #s are where it's at but a 427 will have so much torque everywhere
and the 3600 stall gets past most any potential power band issues. Is this
for your blue car or another project ????
It also predicted that my car would make more average power if a retarded my cam a degree or two. My car slowed down 2 tenths.
Also, it always predicts that every possible combo is optimum with 8 degree duration spread regardless of head flow, intake, headers etc.
I don't know about your program, but I have determined that this program is more of a toy than a tool.
trying 2b sarcastic....just asking. For off idle torque and drivability then yes
average #s are where it's at but a 427 will have so much torque everywhere
and the 3600 stall gets past most any potential power band issues. Is this
for your blue car or another project ????
So far, my "mystery cam" produces the 3rd best "under the curve" powerband. If it saves me $400+ (but only costs me a couple HP or ft-lbs), how can I not justify using it?
It also predicted that my car would make more average power if a retarded my cam a degree or two. My car slowed down 2 tenths.
Also, it always predicts that every possible combo is optimum with 8 degree duration spread regardless of head flow, intake, headers etc.
I don't know about your program, but I have determined that this program is more of a toy than a tool.
I have been testing various cams (off-the-shelf cams and home-built) with Engine Analyzer Pro for my future "427" L-92 build and getting mixed results. Supposedly, altering the LSA should be making much more difference than what the program shows, I'm not seeing but maybe 2-3% change from 102 to 114. And it seems like whatever grind numbers I use always make max power at 6000 and max torque at 5000 (that's about where I want it, however), just not understanding why it doesn't move up the RPM range when plugging in larger numbers.
My main question is this, do I want to be looking for the best "average" HP & torque numbers regardless of the peaks? So far, I've been looking strictly at the AVG numbers.
Is there anything else I should be considering besides what the different specs do to my dynamic CR & knock index since changing the specs are not affecting the RPM range?
I have an adjustable valvetrain, would it be worth the gains by going to a solid roller even with a 6500 RPM max?
Especially for a street car (and road race cars) average torque and hp in the rpm range you use is what gets 'er done.
Done correctly stock LS lifters and rocker arms are good for 7500+. There are also more good hydraulic lobes than solid lobes for the rpm range you are running.
The corrrect valvetrain need not be expensive. If it were my engine, I'd chose the correct valvetrain guy and sell the T&Ds to help pay for the valvetrain.
Would you do your own surgery? Neither would I. Even automotive engineers hire out their valvetrain design and their cataract surgeries.
BTDT on both counts.
My $.02
Jon
Especially for a street car (and road race cars) average torque and hp in the rpm range you use is what gets 'er done.
Done correctly stock LS lifters and rocker arms are good for 7500+. There are also more good hydraulic lobes than solid lobes for the rpm range you are running.
The corrrect valvetrain need not be expensive. If it were my engine, I'd chose the correct valvetrain guy and sell the T&Ds to help pay for the valvetrain.
Would you do your own surgery? Neither would I. Even automotive engineers hire out their valvetrain design and their cataract surgeries.
BTDT on both counts.
My $.02
Jon
I'm planning on using the hydraulic cam I got for free (see above, #6 I think) as it makes the 3rd best curve of all the cams I've "tested" and only then by < 5 HP/ft-lbs. As I go up in duration, the peak numbers naturally go up, but the area under the curve suffers. This is pretty much the best compromise and I could easily get by with stock lifters and trunnion-upgraded rockers with my RPM limit. I've pretty much got everything except the rotating asm. Are you saying the intake is a bottleneck? Because EAP actually shows this to be true at higher RPM's... Tony Mamo spent some time figuring this combo out.
417 11.5ish LSL lobe 243/247 114+2
better heads than yours and a ported 102
Setup for a vette w/ 6spd.
663HP @ 6600 for dyno glory.
For my heavier, better traction, awd setup, lot's of freeway driving, I went with a 239/243 114+2.
https://ls1tech.com/forums/dynamomet...is-dyno-s.html
236/240 .630/.610 111 lsa Ed Curtis shelf cam
https://ls1tech.com/forums/dynamomet...1rwhp-fti.html
From a PatG post, he says the LR intake on a LS1 wants a 42 deg IVC @050. For a 427 you'd add about 10-12 degrees.
Any later and your loosing bottom power for marginal increase up top. The LS6 cam is 40 deg IIRC.
The theory for the wide lsa according to Tony is it creates less fall off past peak with the same or slightly less peak and better low rpm efficiency. -narrow lsa equals higher and narrower peak, wide equals flatter. -and better mileage due to less overlap.
Maybe Jon will say more.....
Last edited by TurboS10; May 30, 2012 at 07:47 PM.
Found out from the previous owner that my mystery cam is actually an LG Motorsports G5-X3. I can only discern it's specs by reverse engineering it, as the numbers are ground off the back. Here's a mock dyno sim using it with the Victor, JR & 1200 CFM throttle valve, 40# injectors and 1.75" headers...
I still need to figure out how to get a 102 on an XT for my build....
make sure your chosen ignition will work with your chosen ECM.
I'm planning on using the hydraulic cam I got for free (see above, #6 I think) as it makes the 3rd best curve of all the cams I've "tested" and only then by < 5 HP/ft-lbs. As I go up in duration, the peak numbers naturally go up, but the area under the curve suffers. This is pretty much the best compromise and I could easily get by with stock lifters and trunnion-upgraded rockers with my RPM limit. I've pretty much got everything except the rotating asm. Are you saying the intake is a bottleneck? Because EAP actually shows this to be true at higher RPM's...Just curious: Why a 427? What sort of rpm, power and torque goals do you have? I've seen some mighty strong 6L or 6.2L with stock bottom ends (with upgraded rod bolts). Being basically cheap, I'd spend my money on the stuff that moves the air, and use the strong bottom the General provided.
One of the car mags just did an LS head comparo: 317 cathedral port vs. LS2(?) rectangular port, both stock, vs. a 345 cc full-on aftermarket head. However they did it on a costly 408 shortblock. Makes me wonder why they spend all that on the bottom end for 44 (or 32) cubes and perhaps 50-60 lb-ft. and hp. It wasn't really a killer in it's best configuration. (about 175-177 psi BMEP at power peak). IMO, it was not really an apples to apples to apples test either.
Oh well. I did get a killer deal on a 2 year subscription to that mag.

My $.02
Jon
I'm mainly looking for something fun to drive that's not temperamental at all. My current 346" combo is peaky and being carbed, is smelly and hard to start. It also has some annoying vibration around 3k that I can't seem to track down (on a different thread here last night, someone mentioned it could be due to poly motor/trans mounts but I wouldn't know how to rule that out)...
Here's a chart with more of the stats on this "paper tiger", the BMEP is quite a bit higher than what you saw in the mag, and I can't argue at all with the BSFC numbers!
190 psi BMEP @ power peak rpm is really quite good. That's -32hp @ 6000 on a 427 compared to 200 psi. Finding the last 32 hp is not always easy.
Look a little closer at your intake manifold flow coefficient and actual runner lengths and maybe the head flow numbers. Don't necesarily take claimed numbers as gospel. Look deeper into EAP. You may get more real-world numbers.
My $.02
Jon
Why such wide LSA's on most LS cams?
1. Is it what works good for making power with pump gas and stock ecm's?
2. A sales and marketing type thing, ie peeps get steered that way by forums, and its hard to sell them if they are not ground wide?
3. Its the real deal and makes LS motors make big power?
4. some combo of the above?
Your program is showing you little change from 102 to 114 lsa, wow I wouldnt think that would hold true in real world. The 102 to 114 is 12 degrees different, But your actually spreading both lobes by that 12 degrees so 24 degrees total. LSA is intake CL to exhaust CL divided by 2. I do not see how you could be moving around lobes by 24 total degrees and not be effecting your results more than that on your program.






