Thread: Hey yall.new guy old question
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01-12-2005 03:24 PM #1
Hey yall.new guy old question
Hey everybody my names earn i have a 82 firebird with a carb'd 305.but im hoping to get a 350 or 454 my uncle says he can make a big block fit.i got a dream for the car just like all you guys here.i want to get it like the knight rider car (like that hasnt been done before).but in my town where everybody love imports my car already stands out.im in high school and i plan to go to a mechanic school and get a job with an american car company.
well my question was whats the difference between flat cams and hydrolic.whats the difference between all of them.do sum need more oil.and what would i HAVE to replace to get a new cam.cause i dont have much money so i dont want to replace unnessary parts but i dont want to smash any valves.
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01-12-2005 03:47 PM #2
All of the older cars, back in the early 50's had a solid lifter, which as the name implies, was a solid peice of metal that rode on the cam lobe. The solid lifter would push against the end of a pushrod which pushed against a rocker which pushed against the end of the valve. With all of these peices of metal in the valve train, as the engine heated up and the metal expanded, the valve opening and closing would be affected by temperature. If the "valve lash" was set properly for an engine running at normal operating temperature, then when the engine was started cold, all the peices in the valve train would shrink a bit (shorter) from the temperature, then the valve lash would change and everything would rattle, because of the increased gaps between all of the components. Then someone found that if you built a 2 peice lifter, like a small hydraulic cylinder, then the engine oil pressure would (pump up) the lifter, making the lifter extend lengthwise untill the "slop" between all of the valve train components was gone. This worked great, because as the valvetrain expanded or contracted with temperature changes, the hydraulic lifter would always keep the components firmly seated against one and other, thus eliminating the rattles and constant frigging around adjusting the valve lash. If you have an old car designed for solid lifters, you can not put hydraulic lifters in it, however if you have a newer engine designed for hydraulic lifters, you can put solid lifters in it. Some people who build racing engines will use a solid lifter, because at really high rpm the hydraulic lifters don't have time to get fully pumped up with oil, and so consequently the valve lash and timing suffer at high engine rpm. The amount of oil that a hydraulic lifter uses to pump it up is very small, because in reality, they only expand about 1/16" in length.Old guy hot rodder
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