Same intake and exhaust duration, same DCR, same lift, different LSA
Cam 1 226/234 112+1 6* of overlap
Cam 2 226/234 113+2 4* of overlap
Cam 3 226/234 114+3 2* of overlap
Cam 4 226/234 115+4 0* of overlap
Cam 5 226/234 116+5 -2* of overlap
In a SBE LS3, I calculate the DCR to be about 8.1:1 in all of them. Intake valve closing in the same place. Pretty sure the last one will run smoother than the first. How would the power curves differ though?
More lobe separation angle = less torque, possibly equal high rpm power, less chop at idle.
Of these I would pick the 113.
MTI T1 112 vs B1 114
LS1Tech - cam-guide see post #2 section C
While doing my research on the T1 I cam across this dyno in which if I recall Tony (Nineball) stated that the blue graph was a T1 (112 lsa) and the other 2 where a B1 (114) lsa. 112 vs. 114
MTI T1 (blue) 221/221 112 vs MTI B1 (other colors) 221/221 114
Similar to Black Bird's post, I would like to have seen two bigger same duration camshafts tested with maybe 4 degrees difference in LSA and same intake valve closing. In that scenario and the one in the first post, nothing changes with intake timing and all the changes are on the exhaust side.
And yeah, I have about 35K miles experience with cam 4 and quite a few miles with a 114+2 using same specs only less lift (Pat G cam).
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Never had issues with ^^^ when my T/A had ~0 overlap cam, now with ~13 degrees overlap ^^^ that happens pretty often.
Alternative test, crank car and if your "woke" grand kids immediately start whining about noise and smell...probably too much overlap for a daily driver...wink.
In the typical LS1/5.7 liter ~4 degrees of overlap will drive nice very near stock with good tuning but it will smell more than ~ -2 degrees overlap. Bigger displacement & compression can take a more overlap and still drive nice.
My 434 has 33 degrees of overlap, and because of the cubic inches, the air speed in the ports (MMS heads) and really good ARH headers, the bucking is very minimal, and only exists in first gear with very light to zero throttle and zero load. And even there, it’s nowhere near as bad as other vehicles I’ve been in with far less overlap, that buck worse. All being manual trannys, to keep this apples vs apples. Of course tuning can have a huge effect on this also and often does.
My 434 has 33 degrees of overlap, and because of the cubic inches, the air speed in the ports (MMS heads) and really good ARH headers, the bucking is very minimal, and only exists in first gear with very light to zero throttle and zero load. And even there, it’s nowhere near as bad as other vehicles I’ve been in with far less overlap, that buck worse. All being manual trannys, to keep this apples vs apples. Of course tuning can have a huge effect on this also and often does.
Cam 1 226/234 112+1 6* of overlap
Cam 2 226/234 113+2 4* of overlap
Cam 3 226/234 114+3 2* of overlap
Cam 4 226/234 115+4 0* of overlap
Cam 5 226/234 116+5 -2* of overlap
In a SBE LS3, I calculate the DCR to be about 8.1:1 in all of them. Intake valve closing in the same place. Pretty sure the last one will run smoother than the first. How would the power curves differ though?
Side track questions on reversion...
Out of the typical off the shelf LS1 fbody exhaust's are there key ingredients to optimize a combination of long tube headers sizes, Y pipe, true dual, etc to run to reduce reversion?
Would a 1 3/4 to 1 7/8 stepped long tube header generally better than a 1 3/4 or 1 7/8?
Y pipe vs X pipe make any difference?
Mufflex's big dual 3 inch Y pipe into a 4 inch merge offers advantages vs the typical 3 inch Y to 3 inch merge. I think the dual 3 inch Mufflex Y to 4 inch Flowmaster merge seems to better torque than the typical 3 inch Y to 3 inch merge.
Thanks
Side track questions on reversion...
Out of the typical off the shelf LS1 fbody exhaust's are there key ingredients to optimize a combination of long tube headers sizes, Y pipe, true dual, etc to run to reduce reversion?
Would a 1 3/4 to 1 7/8 stepped long tube header generally better than a 1 3/4 or 1 7/8?
Y pipe vs X pipe make any difference?
Mufflex's big dual 3 inch Y pipe into a 4 inch merge offers advantages vs the typical 3 inch Y to 3 inch merge. I think the dual 3 inch Mufflex Y to 4 inch Flowmaster merge seems to better torque than the typical 3 inch Y to 3 inch merge.
Thanks
As far as your question as to what exhaust has less reversion, it's an individual chassis problem. If it were my F body, I would do 1 7/8 to the 4in single, mostly for packaging. The Y pipe is critical to making it work. Stepped headers are better, but not sure if the gains are from reversion migration or the extra exhaust velocity gained. Kinda same effect vise/versa. A exhaust pressure gauge and multiple checking points would help find out if there is a specific weak point. That being said, true duals and a x pipe will be better, but I still believe a properly done single exhaust will trump them all.
Last edited by DualQuadDave; Oct 8, 2022 at 11:09 PM.
Side track questions on reversion...
Out of the typical off the shelf LS1 fbody exhaust's are there key ingredients to optimize a combination of long tube headers sizes, Y pipe, true dual, etc to run to reduce reversion?
Would a 1 3/4 to 1 7/8 stepped long tube header generally better than a 1 3/4 or 1 7/8?
Y pipe vs X pipe make any difference?
Mufflex's big dual 3 inch Y pipe into a 4 inch merge offers advantages vs the typical 3 inch Y to 3 inch merge. I think the dual 3 inch Mufflex Y to 4 inch Flowmaster merge seems to better torque than the typical 3 inch Y to 3 inch merge.
Thanks
To find this answer would require a ton of testing, both on an engine dyno and chassis dyno.
What’s known as a general rule that will apply to any combination to aid in exhaust scavenging and fighting exhaust reversion is having your exhaust port diameter slightly smaller than your primary tube diameter, in an effort to make the exhaust gas under reversion, go turbulent when being pulled back into the exhaust port. Ironically this exact topic was brought up this past week….I think it was this week. I’m not even sure what today is lolz….Another constant here is a 180 degree design, which is intended to help adjacent firing cylinders pull on cylinders that are about to fire. But again, diameters, lengths and merge locations are totally dependent on the engine combination and intended operating range, even with a 180 degree system. It’s an interesting topic for sure. I will say this without going into specifics about the Cup camshaft I mentioned above. The exhaust duration is a good bit LESS than the intake duration because their exhaust systems are so efficient. And they are currently running a smaller exhaust valve than what you’d likely imagine. Makes you scratch your head. Scavenge is key.










