Thread: 305 pushin 480HP?
-
10-29-2008 02:39 PM #16
Originally Posted by tony evans
Everyone else reading this needs to understand that any cam you bolt into the motor will have an effective operating range of about 3500 rpm's. It might make power from idle to 4000 or from 1500 to 5000 or from 2500 to 6000 or from 5000 to 8500, depending on the valve opening and closing events that are ground onto the cam lobes when the cam is manufactured. If, for instance, you built the motor with high-buck parts with a target rpm limit of 8500, the cam would be ground to generate power from 5000 to 8500. Under 5000, it wouldn't pull the hat off your head (an exaggeration to make a point), so you'd want to bolt a converter onto the crank (5000 stall for instance) that would allow the motor to rev past the dead zone and get up into the power range of the cam. Most every hot rodder will agree that a 3000 stall converter is about all you want to try to live with on the street, so at a max, you might want to build the motor to make power from 3000 to 6500 on a street motor and 2000 to 5500 would be way more manageable and more fun to drive. We had a saying in the Navy.... "theres always that 1 percent"....., meaning that there will always be 1 percent of the people out there who will try to run a 5000 stall converter on the street.Last edited by techinspector1; 10-29-2008 at 03:07 PM.
PLANET EARTH, INSANE ASYLUM FOR THE UNIVERSE.
-
Advertising
- Google Adsense
- REGISTERED USERS DO NOT SEE THIS AD
Getting closer on this project. What a lot of work!
Stude M5 build