Cam for L92 Heads: Lessons Learned
Yes, been there.
WCCH knows their stuff. Of course, you can get it back by shaving intake but milling heads is not a great way to deal with CC volume.
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I've read this thread a few times now and heaps of others, heaps of interesting info and then theres always the curve ball cam with little or no split pulling good no's.
One thing i've noticed is with the GEN III a ICL of 108>110 seemed the go but with the L92 heads people seem to go more towards the 112 ICL. Just dialled my cam in 114lsa 110ICL and its 2 degrees out at 112ICL and after talking to a few they've told me to leave it at that.
Keep up the good info all
The problem is you have a head(L92) that at: (this is subjective to the bench flow used, stock heads no porting)
.100 E/I is 87%
.200 E/I is 85%
but at:
.500 E/I is 68%
.600 E/I is 66%
Why risk flow between .100-.400 where you will spend 98% of your time in a DD situation or street car for flow at .500+ where unless a drag car but even then you will spend prob 2% of your time.......?
So in esenece running a 10-12+ split at .100 and .200 will not be optimal down low but only help top end power and scavenging up top and some have found these large splits to be a dog down low pending the intake duration chosen... but to combat this guys have run low intake duration (below 220) which too me is not optimizing..... The split should be chosen to complement the E/I%......
E/I % -split
80% > 4* or single
75% < 8*
70% < 10-12*
I would be looking for a split that offers the best overall exhaust timing events and scavenging... not the 4 or 16, too me you are at the too different ends of the powerband.....
I find it funny that if you call comp they reccomend the 12-16 split cams...... for L92's If peak power for a dyno is the game then I say go for it.... But when the guy with a split selected based on what is heads are actually doing runs by you, do not be surprised......
P.S... AFR and Trick flows are great heads but I believe the E/I is better and the cams selected whether by actual knowledge or guessing are well taylored in correlation to the E/I:
trick flow CNC 225:
.100 E/I 81%
.200 E/I 81%
.300 E/I 84%
.400 E/I 82%
.500 E/I 79%
.600 E/I 77%
Now this is why a single pattern or cam with a 4* split works well with this head....
Last edited by bozzhawg; Jun 25, 2010 at 06:04 PM.
I think to net 500RWHP you're going to need and intake duration in that range. With a good tune, return to idle will be very good but you may have a small fuzzy spot (2-300RPM range) somewhere around 1400-1500RPM even with a good tune.
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