I have 248/248 cam setup. The exhaust-to-intake side cam swap is accomplished by retarding the cam anywhere between 3 and 4 teeth on the timing chain. I have tried both settings, 3 teeth and 4 teeth. From my expirementing, I have found these two different scenarios.
1. At 3 teeth the cam is advanced more than normal, causing a larger amount of overlap than normal. The power is phenomenol (sp?) from almost idle up to about 4500 to 5000 RPM.
2. At 4 teeth, the cam is retarded more than normal causing less overlap and power is reduced up until about 4000 RPM and pulls good from there up to redline.
My question stems from the fact that the intake cam setting with LESS overlap is providing MORE power in the upper RPM range and the cam setting with MORE overlap is providing LESS power in the UPPER RPM range. This seems to be counter-intuitive from everything I know about cam timing and overlap.
Is it NOT always the case that high overlap contributes to high RPM power? In my case, it seems that the high amount of overlap is contributing to the power band in the LOW RPM ranges.
Anyone have some insight or experiences of their own on this?
Right now I am running the intake cam at about 3.1 teeth retarded. I achieved this by shaving the cam gear key down a little bit in the direction of the 4th tooth. This bumps the power band up just slightly, barely noticable though.
My time slips are on another thread in this forum. I pulled 4 14.8's with this setup.
Thanks all!
Ben
1. At 3 teeth the cam is advanced more than normal, causing a larger amount of overlap than normal. The power is phenomenol (sp?) from almost idle up to about 4500 to 5000 RPM.
2. At 4 teeth, the cam is retarded more than normal causing less overlap and power is reduced up until about 4000 RPM and pulls good from there up to redline.
My question stems from the fact that the intake cam setting with LESS overlap is providing MORE power in the upper RPM range and the cam setting with MORE overlap is providing LESS power in the UPPER RPM range. This seems to be counter-intuitive from everything I know about cam timing and overlap.
Is it NOT always the case that high overlap contributes to high RPM power? In my case, it seems that the high amount of overlap is contributing to the power band in the LOW RPM ranges.
Anyone have some insight or experiences of their own on this?
Right now I am running the intake cam at about 3.1 teeth retarded. I achieved this by shaving the cam gear key down a little bit in the direction of the 4th tooth. This bumps the power band up just slightly, barely noticable though.
My time slips are on another thread in this forum. I pulled 4 14.8's with this setup.
Thanks all!
Ben