Hollow vs. solid stem valves
solid valves vs hollow stem yellowbullet
https://www.yellowbullet.com/threads.../post-32457610
Last edited by Corona; Sep 30, 2021 at 09:36 PM.
https://www.yellowbullet.com/threads...valves.329547/
Question: So when is it too much spring and what dictates the size to use?
I have used Titanium pistons pins with a DLC, sure they cost a lot, though it does save money when you need to add "heavy metal" in order to "0" balance a crankshaft.
- Stock bottom end ls3 including stock lifters, stage 2 off the shelf cam. Will be run day in and out until something breaks, hopefully never does.
- I would want hollow stem factory LS3 valves here. I've always used dual springs with any aftermarket cam, ~130 seat 350-450 open seems to be the most common range for hydraulic roller spring packages. From what I've seen, this is overkill for most mild cams - single springs will work, but I like the peace of mind of having a dual spring in case one breaks.
- Rowdy street car w/ forged 416 ls3 with short travel slow leakdown lifters, slaps harder than your mom last night stage 4 cam...will go on car show cruises, Mexico roll racing, and hits the track 10 times a year. Took the stock heads off for porting - still has the stock LS3 hollow valves. Do you change them?
- My experience with stock ls3 hollow stems has been good, but I know some have dropped valves. With a hydraulic roller my thoughts have always been hollow stems are needed. Solid valves put extra load on the lifter which is not good for valve control and making sure the lifter isn't eating away at lift or duration. Maybe consider hollow stem stainless aftermarket in this case due to the size of the investment with the shortblock, but I might just go with the stock ls3 hollow stems still? Likely any of the 650 lift dual spring packages on the market will work just fine here with hollow stems.
- LY6 junkyard motor (iron 6.0 w/ L92 heads), hydraulic roller with a sloppy stage 2 cam and an ebay turbo making 1000 hp turning 6500 rpm or less - Gas pedal has two positions, 0 and 30psi, but is just a daily driver.
- Probably again..upgrade to stock ls3 hollow stem valves with some dual springs to handle the extra cylinder pressure?
- Super clean ls3 grand sport corvette with 10k miles - medium sized LLSR will turn up to 7500, likely won't drive past 7000 much, and probably will just show off the dyno sheet and drive 100 miles a year. Just bought M311 heads and needs to pick valves. Has all other premium bolt-ons like carbon clutch, fast intake, 2" headers etc etc.
- This one I honestly don't know - I feel like some will say solid stem, but I think a good hollow stem aftermarket is the way to go and something like a 1207x dual spring from PAC - but solid valves would save a chunk of money, and might not have any issue especially since LLSR or low shock profiles are known for being more gentle to the valvetrain. The intent of the LLSR is to be happy at high rpm, and be faster reving and a smoother engine - lighter valves all are directionally correct for those goals.
- 14:1 compression drag engine and street race machine SBE ls7, LLSR cam but not too crazy - endurance type lobes for good stability and life, 7500+ rpm expected with a single plane, runs mid 8's in a fox body, but the motor only cost $10k to piece together - Might do race week, probably just a race car. The heads are off for porting - do you leave the stock Ti valves? Install Solid, hollow stainless, or expensive aftermarket Ti? Which springs?
- My choice for my work in progress engine is to run some brand new factory Ti LS7 valves, and the "race only" PAC 1237x springs. We'll see how it works out someday. My thought is that the Ti valves aren't breaking, but some blame them for wearing out the guides. I wouldn't expect a failure caused by the factory Ti valve within the service life of the engine, ~5-10,000 miles maximum. I got a set of brand new takeout ls7 valves for cheap, and have a full set of low mile take-outs as spares.
The one that gets me are the Ti vs Stainless threads that you posted Corona - how many people are doing just fine with solid stainless valves, but is that why they're making 640hp instead of 660? Curve looks clean, engine pulls to 7500+ - but is anything being given up?
I guess I'd be curious if anyone with actual data can justify or argue that solid stainless valves (or even L92 truck valves) are acceptable in any of these applications.
Our bracket LS3 engines have had solid stainless valves and pull to 7800 and make great power with a hydraulic roller, but it is only at 7500+ rpm for a few seconds each run.
There has to be a reason why GM has done hollow stem and sodium filled valves for decades. My expectation has always been that it has to do with the hydraulic lifters, and also limitations on what they can do for a single beehive valvespring that will also live 100k+ mile durability testing.
The Best V8 Stories One Small Block at Time
Currently a hydraulic 243/251, 115+5 LSA, 111° ICL, .661"/.633" but thinking about doing an LLSR 246/256 114.5 LSA,110° ICL with .684"/.666".
https://www.chevrolet.com/performanc...valves-springs
12605223
- Valve Size: 2.165"
- Stem Size: 8 mm
- Stock replacement solid-stem valve used in LSA engines
I'm researching some of this now, as I want to run solid stainless intake and inconel exhaust in my marine LSA build (lower RPM, higher continuous load). I acquired a set of very low hour (dyno only) factory blue-spring'd 821 heads, and will be removing what they came with to sub in stock solid SS / Inconel.
https://www.chevrolet.com/performanc...valves-springs
12605223
- Valve Size: 2.165"
- Stem Size: 8 mm
- Stock replacement solid-stem valve used in LSA engines
I'm researching some of this now, as I want to run solid stainless intake and inconel exhaust in my marine LSA build (lower RPM, higher continuous load). I acquired a set of very low hour (dyno only) factory blue-spring'd 821 heads, and will be removing what they came with to sub in stock solid SS / Inconel.
https://www.chevrolet.com/performanc...valves-springs
12605223
- Valve Size: 2.165"
- Stem Size: 8 mm
- Stock replacement solid-stem valve used in LSA engines
I'm researching some of this now, as I want to run solid stainless intake and inconel exhaust in my marine LSA build (lower RPM, higher continuous load). I acquired a set of very low hour (dyno only) factory blue-spring'd 821 heads, and will be removing what they came with to sub in stock solid SS / Inconel.








