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Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. #3180533
10/03/23 10:44 AM
10/03/23 10:44 AM
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Weddington, N.C.
Streetwize Offline OP
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The Can of worms maybe not everyone (including me) completely understands,,,,,

General theory states that timing your Intake centerline to allowing the valve to approach maximum lift at or near the the point of maximum piston velocity (where the connecting rod is just passing the 90 degree right angle to the crank throw) is very beneficial for torque output. Note: NOT the same as 90 degrees past TDC but later. This point where the Right angle is achieved is a constant but will vary depending on rod length (for any given stroke), but it is calculable through Trig.

But if you can maintain a strong unrestricted optimum air/fuel ratio charge flowing past your intake valve at high piston speeds ,The fact that your intake is closing earlier (relative to a later Intake centerline) might actually cost you some power in terms of cylinder filling as the piston is coming back up the bore.

When you get it right, the ramming effect of a strong intake tract will overcome the loss of displacement as the piston is coming back up the bore past BDC which effectively increases dynamic compression. the issue (if you can visualize it) is that as the piston is bottoming and heading back up the bore, the intake valve is rapidly closing the flow window for the port to keep filling the hole.

Where the charge keeps filling as the piston volume is reducing/passing BDC and fully closing is in effect 'supercharging' the lower effective displacement.....that's the key fascination for me....and for any motor and head combination (within the limitations of whet your working with) is what I'm always seeking to achieve is the best balance of both. If you don't have enough intake charge, the piston will push (reversion) the mixture back toward the intake, but if the charge is high enough, you trap more mixture than the cylinder (at that instant where both valves are closed) can hold statically...before actual mechanical compression begins.

I've been doing a lot of research on what Bob Glidden was doing in the 70's with the Cleveland fords and the W2 mopar wedges. It fascinates me how the intake charge, the cam centerline and the intake closing all work together. And also how the torque and power peaks interact and where valve overlap can be (and is) both beneficial and detrimental....depending on what part of the power curve you are looking at.

It was also how I figured out how the F.A.S.T. cars could be getting the amazing outputs they were achieving.

I'm sorry for rambling but I'm sure a lot of you will know what i'm getting at.

I'm just seeking additional insight and understanding from guys with a lot more depth of knowledge than I have.


Last edited by Streetwize; 10/04/23 01:58 PM.

WIZE

World's Quickest Diahatsu Rocky (??) 414" Stroker Small block Mopar Powered. 10.84 @ 123...and gettin' quicker!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-mWzLma3YGI

In Car:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PjXcf95e6v0
Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: Streetwize] #3180810
10/04/23 02:16 AM
10/04/23 02:16 AM
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I MET BOB AT A RACE IN THE SEVENTIES. HE WAS A GREAT GUY TO CHAT WITH AND WOULD ANSWER MOST ALL OF YOUR QUESTIONS.

Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: Streetwize] #3180812
10/04/23 02:22 AM
10/04/23 02:22 AM
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hysteric Offline
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What about IVO and piston demand, If the pressure in the cylinder is still high at IVO what does that do to the intake charge?

Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: Thelma133] #3180848
10/04/23 08:54 AM
10/04/23 08:54 AM
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Weddington, N.C.
Streetwize Offline OP
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I met Bob several times, the last time was when he was crew-chiefing for Larry Morgan, super cool guy and he seemed very amiable and humble and loved being focused on the task at hand.

His work ethic was so evident in his hand shake and his demeanor and he was living proof that hard work pays off. He used to build his engines on the floor and I would love to see a display of all of his many cylinder head and intake manifold innovations.

What amazes me today is the technology of Todays CHI Cleveland head (that anyone can now buy off the shelf) incorporates many of the port innovations (and beyond) that Glidden first envisioned back in the 70's.
He spent 100's of hours brazing and epoxy filling factory heads and manifolds trying to achieve those same types of innovations. He understood port shape, velocity and Air/Fuel MASS allowed the cylinders to trap and burn more mixture and achieve much higher VE than his competitors.

if you want to see something related and interesting watch the youtube channel "driving 4 answers' regarding offset bore cylinders, it looks in depth on how the effective intake stroke increases by several degrees and the compression stroke shortens by several degrees. Kawasaki and other manufacturers have already incorporated it into several of their in-line engines. This means you could effectively fill the cylinder more with less total cam duration and there is somewhat more of the natural "level effect" from the crank on the power stroke, and you can imagine the turbo supercharging possibilities.

The downside is that it upsets the natural primary and secondary counter-balance and the natural maximum stroke of the crank (mechanical stroke) the isn't fully realized.

it's just interesting

Last edited by Streetwize; 10/04/23 01:57 PM.

WIZE

World's Quickest Diahatsu Rocky (??) 414" Stroker Small block Mopar Powered. 10.84 @ 123...and gettin' quicker!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-mWzLma3YGI

In Car:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PjXcf95e6v0
Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: Streetwize] #3180899
10/04/23 10:57 AM
10/04/23 10:57 AM
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Loudoun County, VA
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popcorn


2021 Challenger 6.4L Scat Pack 1320
100% stock: 1.680, 11.894 at 113.75 (DA 175 ft)
weight reduction, wheels, tires, Hellcat air box: 1.661, 11.686 at 115.97 (DA 710 ft)

1973 Challenger 452 ci street/strip [2008]
pump gas, DOT radials: 1.454, 10.523 at 126.44 (DA 514 ft)
Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: Streetwize] #3180978
10/04/23 01:51 PM
10/04/23 01:51 PM
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feets Offline
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I like your thinking and, yes, this might be a little heady for some folks.

My feeble little mind says that maximum intake opening should occur just beyond maximum peak piston velocity. Air is rather elastic. It takes time to get up to speed. Having the valve at maximum opening as the intake charge is at peak velocity would likely be more effective. The delay will be small but heavily dependent upon the target RPM.
Tuning this for peak hp would likely be less effective than timing it for a plateau. Spread it out for more area under the curve but based on the port velocity, not piston speed.
Again, a fine example of building a combo. Change anything in the incoming air's path and you have to start all over again.


We are brothers and sisters doing time on the planet for better or worse. I'll take the better, if you don't mind.
- Stu Harmon
Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: feets] #3180994
10/04/23 02:31 PM
10/04/23 02:31 PM
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Tulsa OK
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I am surprised Polyspheric hasn't jumped in hear yet.


68 Barracuda Formula S 340
Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: Bad340fish] #3180998
10/04/23 02:37 PM
10/04/23 02:37 PM
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fredericksburg,va
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My first thought when reading the post was the intake ‘manifold’ ??? then after reading I finally saw it was the valve. Sounds real close to having high velocity in the intake manifold and intake port, reason the Hemi don’t make power till 5000 but wedge at 2500, stock stuff mind ya.

Last edited by cudaman1969; 10/04/23 02:37 PM.
Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: cudaman1969] #3181006
10/04/23 03:16 PM
10/04/23 03:16 PM
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Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: hysteric] #3181081
10/04/23 07:40 PM
10/04/23 07:40 PM
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nielsville, minn.
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Chrysler engineers worked with this when they developed the Long/Shortrams manifolds. The Shortrams used a special cam gear that was 2° retarded to optimize the ram effect.

Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: hysteric] #3181572
10/06/23 01:47 AM
10/06/23 01:47 AM
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That was a fascinating video!

Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: quickd100] #3181576
10/06/23 03:37 AM
10/06/23 03:37 AM
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Bend,OR USA
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Cab_Burge Online work
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What year are you calling the short ram intake?


Mr.Cab Racing and winning with Mopars since 1964. (Old F--t, Huh)
Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: Cab_Burge] #3181579
10/06/23 05:39 AM
10/06/23 05:39 AM
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Cab, they were available from 60 to 64. Hp ratings were 390 and 400. Mike at Nikes Garage rebuilt a 64 413 out of a 300k that was factory equiped with the 390 Shortrams motor, it also featured a pair of factory cast iron headers. His final hp and torque numbers fell way short of what they should have been. He bored it to 426ci and replaced the factory flat tappet solid cam with a hydraulic. Either the cam was ground wrong or was installed incorrectly.
He's got a YouTube show that's pretty good. He also dynod a 440 with a set of Long rams and a mild hydraulic roller cam. His single rotor dyno couldn't hold the motor at a low enough rpm to record the maximum torque figures. If I remember correctly, the lowest the dyno would hold the motor was 28-2900 and the peak torque was something below that, it was around 570ftlbs at 2800.

Last edited by quickd100; 10/06/23 05:53 AM.
Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: quickd100] #3181623
10/06/23 10:27 AM
10/06/23 10:27 AM
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Learning how to effectively use ENGMOD4T will show you the optimum cam timing events but there is not only the learning curve of learning the software but lots of physical measurements that need to be taken.

The big thing against its use is that it doesn't natively have a decent camshaft profile set of functions, so it needs a plug-in for realistic camshaft profiles.


It's more than lots of enthusiasts are willing to tackle, but its use will allow a much deeper understanding of things like the cylinder ramming effect. There's lots to learn, but some study and a flexible camshaft profile plug-in are required for best results.

It's based on Gordon Blair's equations, so it's really accurate given good inputs.

Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: toddinNH] #3181738
10/06/23 04:55 PM
10/06/23 04:55 PM
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Originally Posted by toddinNH
Learning how to effectively use ENGMOD4T will show you the optimum cam timing events but there is not only the learning curve of learning the software but lots of physical measurements that need to be taken.

The big thing against its use is that it doesn't natively have a decent camshaft profile set of functions, so it needs a plug-in for realistic camshaft profiles.


It's more than lots of enthusiasts are willing to tackle, but its use will allow a much deeper understanding of things like the cylinder ramming effect. There's lots to learn, but some study and a flexible camshaft profile plug-in are required for best results.

It's based on Gordon Blair's equations, so it's really accurate given good inputs.


You mean this guy:
http://www.profblairandassociates.com/pdfs/Back_to_basics.pdf





Last edited by hysteric; 10/06/23 04:57 PM.
Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: Streetwize] #3181747
10/06/23 05:54 PM
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Quote
He understood port shape, velocity and Air/Fuel MASS allowed the cylinders to trap and burn more mixture and achieve much higher VE than his competitors.


Ever heard of a guy called Larry Widmer?

Last edited by hysteric; 10/06/23 05:55 PM.
Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: Streetwize] #3181869
10/07/23 10:07 AM
10/07/23 10:07 AM
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The math to calculate the percentage and actual charge mass captured, the "dynamic" CR, and effective displacement when the intake valve closes ABDC is fairly simple trigonometry based on the engine's rod to stroke ratio. Read my article for more content as well as the formula: http://victorylibrary.com/mopar/cam-tech.htm
However, there are too many variables remaining that are difficult to quantify or reconcile as to their relative contribution to obtain anything like a linear solution. It will predict a trend, not a result.


Boffin Emeritus
Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: Streetwize] #3182018
10/07/23 06:25 PM
10/07/23 06:25 PM
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I wrote an Excel program to do these calculations automatically.Use the sliders to select number of cylinders bore, stroke, rod length, intake valve closure, static CR, atmospheric pressure (Imperial & Metric).
E-mail for a free copy.


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Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: hysteric] #3182020
10/07/23 06:27 PM
10/07/23 06:27 PM
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Streetwize Offline OP
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I have heard of Larry widmer and I believe I have read everything he’s ever published


WIZE

World's Quickest Diahatsu Rocky (??) 414" Stroker Small block Mopar Powered. 10.84 @ 123...and gettin' quicker!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-mWzLma3YGI

In Car:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PjXcf95e6v0
Re: Intake closing...Effective displacement vs Intake charge. [Re: Streetwize] #3182036
10/07/23 07:35 PM
10/07/23 07:35 PM
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hysteric Offline
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Originally Posted by Streetwize
I have heard of Larry widmer and I believe I have read everything he’s ever published


Guess that makes 2 of us. Here's Larry discussing some of his stuff on another forum.


Now I'll address your head related questions: With the exception of blown applications, ports don't just flow one direction. Intake ports pulsate back and forth, and exhausts flow backwards too. This occors primarily at overlap, when the cylinder still has positive exhaust trying to exit the exhaust port ...where header back pressure is pushing backwards. Now the intake valve (which is larger in diameter) opens, and exhaust gasses seeking the path of least pressure take the easy way.....the intake port "exit". This is not a good thing because besides turning the intake port black "reversion" also contaminates the intake charge with inert gasses which will not burn again. My studies showed a direct correlation between low lift intake flow and reverse flow.....The better the low lift flow on an intake port, the better the tendency for reverse flow, or sucking exhaust. I designed my intake ports to not flow worth a [censored] at low lift, and also to not flow backwards.


Its obvious that if you can create enough inertia early on in the intake cycle then it will continue well past BDC. The irony here is some engines need more exhaust residual to improve the burnable mixture by increased vaporization so airflow dynamics are one thing and the chemistry of the burn is another.

Are you familiar with UDHarold?


At low engine RPM, an early exhaust opening HURTS bottom-end power. It could extract more torque from the crank, instead of blowing power out the exhaust pipe.
At low engine RPM. an early exhaust closing HELPS bottom-end power. It helps prevent reversion from contaminating the intake, and reduces fuel loss during overlap. At low-RPMs, it is the TIME of the exhaust overlap, not the number of degrees it has.
At high engine RPM, an early exhaust opening HELPS top-end power. The most important thing becomes the necessity of cleaning exhaust gasses out of the cylinder, to allow the maximum intake charge to get in.
Peak engine horsepower occurs when the exhaust cam can no longer let ALL the old exhaust gasses out, and some remain to hinder cylinder filling.
All these things occur with the intake on the same ICL.


I remember Larry Meaux discussing a Hemi engine once that had the most VE he had ever seen on his dyno. The problem was the intake charge was heading straight the exhaust port so it wasn't reflected in the power it was making or should have been making had it been contained in the cylinder and utilized.



Just more stuff to think about.





Last edited by hysteric; 10/07/23 07:49 PM.
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