what the hell is going on with Comp 918s????
Can anyone give me a straight answer as to what the hell is going on here?
I bought my cam and 918s last July and had them installed around October...They seem to be ok so far through a few thousand miles, though i'm honestly not sure if maybe the valvetrain is making any new noises or not (it always sounded loud and kinda ugly after the cam swap).
Should I be worried about this? for what it's worth, i'm running a .567 lift cam on an XE lobe which seems like it SHOULD be WELL under the limit for these springs....
anyone with some input?
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This being said, when I get heads later this year, I will be getting a dual spring.
James
Last edited by eallanboggs; May 22, 2007 at 05:45 PM.
They're ALL recent, post blue-stripe.
I'm NOT saying ALL Comp 918s are defective....far from it. I just don't like the timing of these particular cases relative to the time my own cam and valvetrain went in.
I'm an engineer in another field and I've investigated warranty trends and field failures on a number of occasions to try to determine root cause. When something happens to you or someone you know, it's easy to jump to conclusions. However, when you try to take a careful, rational look into things you might not jump to those conclusions so quickly.
One thing that I will mention is that valve springs, especially with high spring rates and used with relatively large valve lifts and at high RPM must be brought up to operating temperature before they are pushed hard (especially at or near their design limit). This is true of any manufacturer's springs (single or dual) even with careful attention to metallurgy/quality control, etc.
Steve
Last edited by Steve Bryant; May 22, 2007 at 09:24 PM.
Steve
I agree..I ALWAYS warm up my car for at least a minute before I drive it and I wait till it hits full operating temperature to push it anywhere north of 3000 RPM.
Obviously, I don't know all the specifics of all the cases of breakage lately, but a lot of the people sounded like they were mechanically knowledgeable enough not to push a cold valvetrain.....
I'm an engineer in another field and I've investigated warranty trends and field failures on a number of occasions to try to determine root cause. When something happens to you or someone you know, it's easy to jump to conclusions. However, when you try to take a careful, rational look into things you might not jump to those conclusions so quickly.
One thing that I will mention is that valve springs, especially with high spring rates and used with relatively large valve lifts and at high RPM must be brought up to operating temperature before they are pushed hard (especially at or near their design limit). This is true of any manufacturer's springs (single or dual) even with careful attention to metallurgy/quality control, etc.
Steve
Very well said indeed. FWIW, I have about 6000 miles on my comp 918 springs installed about 1.5 years ago and ALWAYS bring my blown C5 Z06 (with stock LS6) up to full operating temps. anytime she sees in excess of 3000 rpm!
cheers
As with any product, proper installation is key. How many people that use 918s actually check the install height? How many actually shim the springs so that they are at the proper install height. All of these things are important factors not only in the performance of a spring but also in its life. How many of these springs are being used with these ridiculously aggressive cam profiles that punish the valvetrain? So many variables....yet everyone wants simple answers....typical...
Andrew
Steve B good call on temp. I always wait until oil is at 180 before WOT runs. Saw this proven on Dyno several years ago, several dyno runs at 150 oil temp, spit out bearings. 180 never a problem.


bye bye LE2 383



