Hybrid View
-
02-19-2008 09:55 AM #1
I am a little too ........saddistic.........The cam with the special world saving specs that are soo top secret the owner can not know what they are.............and deliver his special world saving cam back to him thru the biggest window in his shop,then get a cam with some bigger specs to bleed off some pressure............I have no patience for knowledge withholders,they ususally have no greatness of their own ,soo they hide the info in hopes that it makes them look special or knowledgable.................the guy needs his cam back anyway on account of he speced it wrong anyway ,because it does not work for what he speced it for.............I spec I would tell him to shove the cam where the sun dont shine and then maybe he could get personal and familiar with the proper specs for a street engine.
Now on to helping ,you are going to need as much info on the engine as possible,fuel ratio ,timing curve,cranking compression etc.....I hope Paul Kane sees this one ,as this is his specialty,the 385 series engines.
It may be just a few little adjustments here and there ,a little more fuel,a little less timing,a little different timing curve........you are running premium gas .....?
The builder could have put in massive dish pistons causing a quench issue ,but that is not likely ,because of the high cranking compression you talked about.
What does the fuel ratio look like a lean condition will cause pinging too.Its gunna take longer than u thought and its gunna cost more too(plan ahead!)
-
02-19-2008 10:13 AM #2
That didn't sit well with me either, the part about the builder being so secretive. Aren't you the guy who paid the tab? When I take my engines to the machine shop I specify exactly what I want done and he is my employee at that point, your situation is no different. Just doesn't make any sense to me. I would he at his door step with some very serious questions for this guy. Even if Keith Black built your engine he would tell you all the specs and parts used......this isn't voodoo!
Don
-
02-19-2008 10:45 AM #3
Originally Posted by Itoldyouso
Have you seen the used car commercial ,where the customer brings the witch doctor with him to the car lot....he tells the salesman that if he does not get a good deal the witch doctor is gunna shrink his head.........Its gunna take longer than u thought and its gunna cost more too(plan ahead!)
-
02-19-2008 12:40 PM #4
Like Shawnlee said, determine what the fuel/air ratio is first. It's the easiest thing to change if the motor is lean.
With the ratio dialed in, if it still pings, take another compression reading on all cylinders with the motor warmed, throttle blades wired full-open and coil wire disconnected.
Crane Cams recommends no more than about 165 psi on a street motor with good pump gas: here's their verbage:
"In very basic terms, the more cylinder pressure we make the more power the engine will produce. But look out for the fuel! Today's pump gas is too volatile and cannot tolerate high compression ratio (above 10.5:1) and high cylinder pressure (above approximately 165 PSI) without risking detonation. Fuel octane boosters or expensive racing gasoline will be necessary if too much cylinder pressure is generated."
I suspect, like Tango said, you're around 11.0:1 at this point and in my opinion, you have no choice but to change some parts if you are limited to pump gas. Bigger chambers from '73-up heads will do it. A longer cam will also do it, but will move the operating range of the motor higher in the rpm band and may require better valve springs, a looser converter and shorter gears. What's happening is that the intake valve is closing too soon and trapping too much mixture for the static compression ratio. A longer cam will move that point to later in the cycle and bleed off some of the compression. You can also change the intake closing point with the cam you have now by retarding it in relation to the crank. This will extend the closing point and bleed off some compression at the expense of power at the low end.
I'm not a fan of using thicker or multiple head gaskets to lower compression because it changes or negates squish (piston to cylinder head clearance with the piston at top dead center). A tight squish (0.035" to 0.045") will go a long ways in reducing the tendency of the motor to detonate with a higher static compression ratio. A case in point is the '72 cylinder heads which were open chamber (no squish) and contributed to detonation so badly that Ford discontinued them after only one year of production.Last edited by techinspector1; 02-19-2008 at 12:42 PM.
-
02-19-2008 02:13 PM #5
Thank you all so much for your replys, and the sharing of your knowledge. The problem with the builder is that I was stupid for not having a written estimate of the cost of his work, and realizing 3/4 of the way in that the guy was a thief as well.
He said that he would pull my old motor, rebuild a core 460 for me, and put it back in the car for a thousand dollars, or less. This involved my helping out with some of the grunt labor to reduce cost. After a YEAR AND A HALF and numerous little things that made me rethink his stated motor-building experience, he presented me with a $2600 bill.
3/4 of the way I was dropping of some parts for him at his shop, and while standing around waiting for him, I noticed a hood scoop that looked a lot like mine sitting in the bed of his pickup. It had been in my trunk.
Sure enough, it was.
I retrieved it and put back in the trunk. I didn't want to confront him over it because my motor was sitting on his workbench in pieces. It wasn't until I finally got the car home that I realized that he had stolen my 5-volume factory 71 Lincoln manual set that was in the trunk too.
I did go back at him over that, but he totally denied taking them. The argument got heated, and he finally called the Police to get me to leave. The cops were sympathetic because I wasn't the first irate customer this shmo has had, but I couldn't prove anything.
So now there is no contact between us and no info coming either. I am going to take the advice given here and start out with new updated motor performance stats, and go from there. Thanks again.Please look below for more about my car...
http://www.cardomain.com/member_pages/view_page.pl?page_id=278481
-
02-19-2008 07:34 PM #6
Originally Posted by 71LincolnCoupe
Derek Doble
-
02-19-2008 02:00 PM #7
Originally Posted by shawnlee28
I re-built an IMCA sport -mod engine for a guy last year.
When I pulled the cam from the engine it only had two letters on it.
The letters where F.Y.
First I started to laugh and then I got madder by the second.
We had our own secret cam ground for his engine but we where even worse.
We put fake numbers off a shelf -cam on it that was an O.E.M replacement cam number.
Ditto on the model kits! My best were lost when the Hobby Shop burned under suspicious circumstances....
How did you get hooked on cars?