I have been talking with a lot of V8 guys and a well known VW cam grinder and we ground my cam on a 106 lobe center. Many a V8 guy has run this LC and built killer torque motors for up to 5500 to 6000 rpm.
If you're working with a cam grinder that fully understands the game (not all do) then you're in good hands futzing with LSA. When I worked at Kymco Ron Silva built a 2276 (I believe) for a play car. He had Web grind the cam to a narrower LSA (initially against the recommendations of the grinder) and that car ran very low 11s on pump gas.
The key I am working toward is the fact that I do not DRAG RACE my car. I do 100% of my driving on the freeway or stop and go.
Well that's sort of a given--I wouldn't have talked about such a mildly cammed engine otherwise.
However, with the duration 0f 274 and 108 lobe center, most of the power came in after 2500 rpm.
Mine wasn't exactly a slouch when slower than 2,500rpm but I wouldn't exactly expect an engine with any sort of cam and the ports to use it to make brag-worthy power in that range. I mean I could pussyfoot my engine around just off throttle and have fun just the same. You can get a nice flat torque curve but as a rule you're going to concentrate most of the power at a higher speed.
The exhaust on the new grind will close at 35 degrees ABDC to give me the static compression I am looking for.
Static CR is simply swept volume to chamber volume. Effective is determined by the static and the point where the
intake
valve closes. Dynamic gets used interchangeably with effective but dynamic is technically determined by the effective CR and charge velocity.
I am going for torque that plants you in the seat early (off idle to 5500) and not concerned about horsepower made after 5500. Motors that make more power at the bottom end don't have to be twisted to 6,000 to 7,000 rpms to be a fun ride.
Torque is what made the Olds W30 package so fun to drive. Torque makes cars launch hard. It fries tires. It does all the things kids (like us) like to do.
Most of us VW guys have been used to building a big motor and throwing a cam grind off the shelf in it.
You're preaching to the choir. Volkswagen guys at one point were pretty damn savvy but then somewhere along the line they lost their way. It just blows me away that so many people consider a generic ignition curve from an off-the-shelf distributor will work properly for a performance engine. The whole industry is lacking things like affordable dished pistons, things that the corn-rocket industry takes for granted.
This is where most VW grinds originated anyway....from V8 cam profiles.
I got one better for you: most older V8 cam profiles were taken directly from Flathead grinds.
It will be interesting to see what it produces with the chamber design, compression ratios (Static and Dynamic) as well as the motor size and flow of the heads at a lower RPM. I am always game for trying new things...to get my motor to do what I like for every day driving.
Experimentation is the name of the game. You have me on everything except the big chambers--that's a lot of area to light off completely in such a short amount of time. Don't take that as me saying it won't work; it will. But I think there are better ways. I respect your motivation, though.