Sunday morning musings - how does an engines size effect the cam spec ?
Let's say cam X is designed for 1776 - 1915 to give around 150bhp.
If the same cam is then fitted to a 2276, what happens to the speculated bhp figure ?
If displacement alone is increased, will the bhp stay the same and be reached at a lower rpm ? Or is it presumed that an increase in displacement will include larger valves, higher rocker ratio etc so the 150bhp could increase to 180bhp ?
Sitting in the sun, drinking coffee, thinking about this
Darren
I'm glad somebody posted this question and I wished the people writing the cam catalogs paid more attention to this. I've complained for a long time about how misleading the descriptions are in cam catalogs, which really can't be called "misinformation" but it could well be referred to as "incomplete information."
You can bolt any cam into any engine, meaning if you order a Type 1 cam, you can install it in any (size cc) Type 1 engine, provided gear/cam and oil pump all are made to get along. Problem is, the cam catalog people tend to write the descriptions just like this.
Cam "X" could be 0.470" at valve, 257 deg @ .050" and 288 deg advertised, I'm just making this up for an example on what we could all agree on as a hot street-ish cam.
We should probably get some of the requirements discussed before we theorize how it's going to behave...
1. dual port heads MINIMUM
2. dual 2bbl carbs or some kind of FI and an exhaust that creates strong vacuum signal
3. some dynamic compression (how much depends on cam timing, cc of engine, intended use, port work, intake, etc)
4. Robust enough valvetrain so everything stays next to one another and so it can do some revs
If you were to build an 87 x 69 with the above cam, set up with correct port design/diameter, valve diameter, dual 36-40mm IDF/DRLA, 9.5:1 and some kind of appropriate extractor header, you can be sure it's going to want to run, and run hard in the upper rpm reaches. Because of the IR intake, it will actually run well all around, but definitely come into its own after 35-3800 rpm. I ran this engine years ago, as a daily driver. I'd have to keep the gearshift moving, to keep the thing in the sweet spot, but it was a lot of fun.
If you used this cam in a big 2300cc romper stomper, the character of the engine would change dramatically. The requirements would remain the same, but the engine would now probably "hit hard" down around 2300-2700 rpm, and pull well to 58-6000 rpm. Not as much need to shift down, but maybe less fun to wring out on a long open road.
As cylinder cc volume goes up, in order to fill them, you need more cam to keep higher rpm VE up.
As Porsche increased 911 displacement, but retained same "S" cam profile, peak HP kept happening at a lower and lower rpm. And their specific hp went down. I'm not saying the engine HP went down, but the engine's hp/liter did.