LSX454:big intake swap, no change in power
#41
You keep saying you had enough fuel, but did you see my fuel pressure story in post #20? I wouldn't fret too much until you can see what the engine does after fixing the fuel delivery issues.
Good luck, man. I know from my past struggles that these things can be frustrating! And it's rarely just one root cause. Fix each thing as you discover it and I promise you that the other things will become easier to figure out.
Good luck, man. I know from my past struggles that these things can be frustrating! And it's rarely just one root cause. Fix each thing as you discover it and I promise you that the other things will become easier to figure out.
Another lesson learned on my part is the 4" intake was a restriction. I could tell by MAP readings at full throttle. I upsized to a 5" intake with a big *** filter and MAP readings improved ~3 kpa and the car got faster. So I'd venture to guess you could maybe run into same issue.
K&N has guidelines on their website of filter surface area requirements vs. air flow needs. According to K&N, a 454 @ 7000 rpm needs about 155 in-sq of filter surface area. If you are using a conical filter then google calculations for "surface area of a circular truncated cone"
K&N has guidelines on their website of filter surface area requirements vs. air flow needs. According to K&N, a 454 @ 7000 rpm needs about 155 in-sq of filter surface area. If you are using a conical filter then google calculations for "surface area of a circular truncated cone"
After reading your thread again I have a feeling you may be having an issue with the adapter plate on the intake.
These are known to sometimes not work and kill power.
Jake mentioned this.
I also think upgrading the fuel pump is something you should do asap.
Your stall converter is perfect for what you are wanting to do.
Get that 252/262 113lsa +4 camshaft or the more mild version.
Will work really well with it.
These are known to sometimes not work and kill power.
Jake mentioned this.
I also think upgrading the fuel pump is something you should do asap.
Your stall converter is perfect for what you are wanting to do.
Get that 252/262 113lsa +4 camshaft or the more mild version.
Will work really well with it.
Yes it's for sure tiny. I am running a boost a pump and have seen blown G8s get up around 575 with that setup so I figured with a leaner air fuel ratio I should be ok, but I know everyone's setup is different. The fuel pump is the next thing to go.
The following users liked this post:
31bad91 (11-14-2019)
#42
I will definitely do that!! I hover around 96-97 kpa at WOT, but I know I need a new air filter and will look into what your saying before I buy one. I only have so much area inside the little "box" that the filter sits in but maybe I need to switch to an over the radiator type.
Here's a quick guide to filter dimensions needed to support your engine. I had already created a spreadsheet and just updated it for 454 ci. Go ahead and save the image because I will delete it after a little while to keep my photos cleaned up.
Each curve represents a particular engine operating speed (rpm). The intersection of the x-axis and y-axis at the curves shows you the filter dimensions needed to hit the required surface area at that rpm. This will make it easier to shop for a filter that can fit inside your box. It assumes the filter tip diameter is 66% of the base diameter, which seems to be typical by my survey.
** link removed **
Last edited by QwkTrip; 12-01-2019 at 05:12 PM.
#43
Might be smart to change the filter too. My 4th gen F-body filter had just 5K miles but I changed it and the pressure went up 5 psi at WOT (this is when my pump was still undersized).
That surprised me! But then I began looking at flow specs for my OE filter and realized it was one of the limiting factors too. I thought about buying an aftermarket filter but didn't when I saw how poor the filtration is compared to stock. This winter I'm probably going to plumb in 2 stock filters in parallel.
That surprised me! But then I began looking at flow specs for my OE filter and realized it was one of the limiting factors too. I thought about buying an aftermarket filter but didn't when I saw how poor the filtration is compared to stock. This winter I'm probably going to plumb in 2 stock filters in parallel.
#44
Are they the short travel lifters? What size pushrods are you running? I had an issue when I ran pushrods too long. Ultimately ended up with severe valvetrain instability, valve float, and the valves pulled through the retainers.
#45
My lsx454 with cnc'd ls3 heads , fast intake , 1 7/8 headers, 102mm throttle body, the same cam 239/254 , fore innovations twin fuel pumps, made 540rwhp....
So pretty close if you compare
So pretty close if you compare
#46
Might be smart to change the filter too. My 4th gen F-body filter had just 5K miles but I changed it and the pressure went up 5 psi at WOT (this is when my pump was still undersized).
That surprised me! But then I began looking at flow specs for my OE filter and realized it was one of the limiting factors too. I thought about buying an aftermarket filter but didn't when I saw how poor the filtration is compared to stock. This winter I'm probably going to plumb in 2 stock filters in parallel.
That surprised me! But then I began looking at flow specs for my OE filter and realized it was one of the limiting factors too. I thought about buying an aftermarket filter but didn't when I saw how poor the filtration is compared to stock. This winter I'm probably going to plumb in 2 stock filters in parallel.
That is definitely interesting. What was your torque? Do you have a graph by chance? I would love to see that for comparisons sake
#48
#49
#50
Did you get those LS3 heads ported by Higgins?
I'm guessing the rpm would not have been high due to smallish camshaft size for that engine
But still it's a great result.
#51
Re-read your whole thread. One question I never saw answered is your compression. It should be high on its own just from cubic inches, unless you have deep dished pistons. Not to be confused with deep dish chicago style pizza. Skipped breakfast...
Anyway, your power is peaking too low, and that's part of the reason for the low power number. RPM is power. Even getting the peak up in the 6500 range will improve your max power significantly. The cam you are running has too early IVC. Diet coke said it best. You may as well be running a 202 cam in a 346. On a 454, I would put your IVC out to 55 degrees. To get that to drive well, you'd want some compression. On the order of 12.5:1, which with a big cam like that will still run on 93. DCR will only be 8.4. So, if you run that 252/262 Bort threw out earlier, it's a decent match and will definitely run better than your current cam. Will have a ton of overlap, which you may or may not want to deal with. Kind of depends on your tolerance and intended use. You could run a 246/258-115+3 which will rev good and clean and be tame to drive. Would still want compression to make it work.
Anyway, your power is peaking too low, and that's part of the reason for the low power number. RPM is power. Even getting the peak up in the 6500 range will improve your max power significantly. The cam you are running has too early IVC. Diet coke said it best. You may as well be running a 202 cam in a 346. On a 454, I would put your IVC out to 55 degrees. To get that to drive well, you'd want some compression. On the order of 12.5:1, which with a big cam like that will still run on 93. DCR will only be 8.4. So, if you run that 252/262 Bort threw out earlier, it's a decent match and will definitely run better than your current cam. Will have a ton of overlap, which you may or may not want to deal with. Kind of depends on your tolerance and intended use. You could run a 246/258-115+3 which will rev good and clean and be tame to drive. Would still want compression to make it work.
Last edited by Darth_V8r; 11-04-2019 at 08:48 AM.
#52
#53
Thanks for posting. So we have the same displacement, same cam, I have better heads and at one point we had almost the same intake and you have 85 more ft lbs torque lol. That is about where I thought mine would be, maybe a bit less. Wow
#55
I am the OP, what I'm saying is we have basically the same setup and I have 515rwtq and the other guy has 595 lol. If USA dynos read higher than it's even more laughable as we have the same cam and everything
#56
Re-read your whole thread. One question I never saw answered is your compression. It should be high on its own just from cubic inches, unless you have deep dished pistons. Not to be confused with deep dish chicago style pizza. Skipped breakfast...
Anyway, your power is peaking too low, and that's part of the reason for the low power number. RPM is power. Even getting the peak up in the 6500 range will improve your max power significantly. The cam you are running has too early IVC. Diet coke said it best. You may as well be running a 202 cam in a 346. On a 454, I would put your IVC out to 55 degrees. To get that to drive well, you'd want some compression. On the order of 12.5:1, which with a big cam like that will still run on 93. DCR will only be 8.4. So, if you run that 252/262 Bort threw out earlier, it's a decent match and will definitely run better than your current cam. Will have a ton of overlap, which you may or may not want to deal with. Kind of depends on your tolerance and intended use. You could run a 246/258-115+3 which will rev good and clean and be tame to drive. Would still want compression to make it work.
Anyway, your power is peaking too low, and that's part of the reason for the low power number. RPM is power. Even getting the peak up in the 6500 range will improve your max power significantly. The cam you are running has too early IVC. Diet coke said it best. You may as well be running a 202 cam in a 346. On a 454, I would put your IVC out to 55 degrees. To get that to drive well, you'd want some compression. On the order of 12.5:1, which with a big cam like that will still run on 93. DCR will only be 8.4. So, if you run that 252/262 Bort threw out earlier, it's a decent match and will definitely run better than your current cam. Will have a ton of overlap, which you may or may not want to deal with. Kind of depends on your tolerance and intended use. You could run a 246/258-115+3 which will rev good and clean and be tame to drive. Would still want compression to make it work.
The cam you specified would be more tame and having equal overlap on intake and exhaust it will drive good everywhere.
Then again the OP has a 3600rpm stall converter so he may as well use something bigger.
OP, I recommend this spec from Darth for something more mild at 22 degrees of overlap.
This will drive quite well in a 454 after a good tune of course.
The 252/262 113 LSA +4 will make more power and torque and has 9 degrees more overlap.
Will still drive ok with some good tuning.
All the good parts that you have and if it was mine, I would definitely go the bigger stick.
24 degrees of overlap in my 408 drove no different than 12 degrees.
31 degrees in a 454 I am betting will still be tame.
Get on to that fuel pump first!
#58
Originally Posted by LSX454G8
Thanks for posting. So we have the same displacement, same cam, I have better heads and at one point we had almost the same intake and you have 85 more ft lbs torque lol. That is about where I thought mine would be, maybe a bit less. Wow
#59
I will check temps today with the IR gun. I did a spark plug change literally minutes before my dyno session and they all looked identical. I've checked a couple after and same story but you could be right. I need to check everything at this point. I cant count how many of your posts I've read over the years lol, so I will check over all plugs, wires, and check individual temps today.
#60
Originally Posted by LSX454G8
I will check temps today with the IR gun. I did a spark plug change literally minutes before my dyno session and they all looked identical. I've checked a couple after and same story but you could be right. I need to check everything at this point. I cant count how many of your posts I've read over the years lol, so I will check over all plugs, wires, and check individual temps today.