Hotpocket, two letters is all you need to know about camshafts. Repeat after me:
R
V
(freddy)
Seriously though, howstuffworks.com actually has a pretty solid body of information on how engines work. Search pushrod V8 or something. Doing a timing belt or chain job on a few different motors will force you to learn most of what you are asking. To get you off on the right foot, try to understand how the strokes on a 4-stroke engine work. Then understand how the crankshaft and camshaft work together to make the valves work. Then understand how the camshaft and distributor work together to add fire to the mix, then try to tie it all together and you'll have a better understanding than if you were to just take a motor apart or look at a pile of parts
duration is the degrees from rise to fall, lift is the amount it goes up, seperation angle is the angle between intake and exhaust.
crankshaft spins twice as fast as cam, 2:1 ratio on the timing chain.
that should cover it all
sae meeting tonight at 7:30 if you think this really is your thing.
Last edited by robertf03; 11-02-2009 at 11:42 AM.
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like valve open dwell angle and duration? I agree, but you don't see those #s in jegs or summit. I think something that closes quicker than it opens would be best for sub 3500 rpm v8's, but the I haven't seen too many detailed discussons about this from the car world. Everyone assumes a symmetric lobe. Maybe its because crazy profiles are hard to do without roller lifters.
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duration at .050 lift is is what describes the ramp rate. super fast ramp rates really= high spring rates for pushrod central cam engines.
yeah but it still leaves out details. all that the duration tells you is when it starts and stops moving. these two profiles could have the same specs on paper, but would be used for very different RPM ranges since lift at .050 would start at roughly the same angle, but the duration at max lift would be different
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lobes have to be somewhat egg shaped or the lifters will get ripped out of the bores or the lifter will wear really fast. that is why .050 lift duration works for most people. flat tappet cams with over about 240 degrees at .050 go flat really easy because the ramp rate is to high for a flat lifter. a roller could probably do a weird shaped lobe like you have pictured but it would eat rollers because to get a spring rate that would hold the lifter on the lobe it would have to be really high. being able to control the rest of the valvetrain package's weight is the main reason you don't see really crazy lobes on lower performance cams.
have you never seen a roller cam lobe next to a flat tappet lobe? they are very different. the goal is to open and close the valve as quickly as possible with the type of lifter you are using. flem's drawing is exactly what the comparison is like between a roller and flat tappet camshaft.
hotpocket, i honestly learned most of what i know about engines from reading HOT ROD on the crapper in high school. its written in layman's terms and an excellent place to learn. get a subscription, its cheap.
as long as it is not noncave then duration at .050 lift numbers accuratly describe the ramp rate, that is all I am getting at.
i don't agree. it does not tell you the time at max lift. a flat tappet and a roller cam could have the same duration and lift numbers but have vastly different lift profiles.