... what is the primary difference of advancing the cam, via offset washers, or having the cam ground on a smaller LC. The same or is there another difference?
Ted
There's a big difference between the two....
Advancing the CamAdvancing (or retarding) the cam has zero effect on the lobe centre (LC) relationship between intake and exhaust - also known as Lobe Centre Angle (LCA) or Lobe Separation Angle (LSA)..
e.g. advance the cam 3°.... opening and closing events on both valves take place 3° earlier.
LCA (or LSA) is
ground into the cam - you can't do anything to change it, other than change the cam.
Advanced cam timing tends to improve performance at lower rpm, in main due to earlier intake valve closing but will rob some peak power.
Most cam manufacturers have already ground the lobes with around three degrees of advance, i.e. dial in your cam as per the cam card and you're already advanced.
Check your cam card.
If the cam has been designed with zero advance, intake open and ex close numbers will match. Same goes for intake close and ex open.
e.g. Engle FK87: int open 32, ex close 28. Int close: 64, ex open 68.
Take the difference and divide by 2 to determine amount of advance ground into the cam...
(32 - 28)/2 = 2° adv.
or... (68 - 64)/2 = 2
i.e. dial in cam as per the cam card and your cam is installed 2° advanced.
Retard the FK87 by 2° compared to cam card and your figures will be 30/30 and 66/66 (true zero advance).
This calculation applies to cams with identical intake and exhaust lobes. Split duration cams are a little more complicated.
Smaller Lobe Centre AngleAssuming same design lobes, grinding the cam on smaller lobe centres increases overlap and reduces the time (in crank degrees) between exhaust valve open and intake valve close.
Smaller lobe centres increase valve overlap, which can benefit performance at high rpm but will generally result in rougher idle and loss of torque at lower rpm due to a portion of the intake charge getting blown straight out the exhaust port - one of the reasons many turbo specific cams use wider lobe centres and less duration than your average n/a cam .