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Small powerhouses and old school
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Topic: Small powerhouses and old school (Read 708732 times)
JIMP
Sr. Member
Posts: 338
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #540 on:
October 18, 2010, 14:18:58 pm »
Hello Johannes
just a small question, in that video with those rpm you use the tappered aluminum pushrods or the "std" chromoly ones?
Thanks in advance
Dimitrios
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Shag55
Full Member
Posts: 220
Shag Leone, SL-1racing
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #541 on:
October 19, 2010, 21:36:12 pm »
Bad a$$ man! what is the spring rate for those springs? Are they simaler to the CB 650s? If you don't mind how big is the cam on this new motor, @.050 and lift @ cam?
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325hp and 290# torque @17psi on 91 pump
383hp and 324# torque @23psi on 50/50 mix
Shag55.sl1racing@gmail.com
Facebook at SL 1 racing
Carsten
Full Member
Posts: 141
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #542 on:
October 20, 2010, 08:26:49 am »
Great !
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1969 IRS bug
Peter Shattock
Sr. Member
Posts: 359
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #543 on:
October 20, 2010, 13:08:51 pm »
Quote from: Atom Heart Mother on October 14, 2010, 18:11:15 pm
Peter congratulations on your motor, seems it is best of "both worlds" and the motor I dream about at night.
Thanks, although its Johannes we are thanking here. What you say is a good reminder actually, I’m sure it’s a human nature thing, but I’ve a terrible habit of not realizing or being grateful for what I’ve got. But as you say it is the thing of dreams really. It was not long ago, that if I’d been told the car could do what it has done this year, both on the street and the track, I would not have believed it!
Its interesting that after all these years of driving and racing the car, the 6 tenths faster that it ran this year relative to my previous years PB, is the biggest single leap the car has made. The engine is a little bigger, and in previous years I had purposely been making smaller steps to measure the improvement in a more measured way, rather than changing a load of things at once. None the less, I was definitely trying to go faster, and to have come this far, then to take of 6 tenths in one year, and if anything found it easier to drive on the street, is still amazing to me. The strange thing is I now know that it can be even better, but I suppose there will always be room for improvement.
I do have this horrible sinking feeling that my trips to Sweden over the last couple of years were the first of many, rather than the first and last. I’ve certainly found Johannes’s enthusiasm for all things performance very infectious, regardless of his clear skill and ability, and in many respects it’s a great relief to me that he lives miles away, as the distraction would be even worse than it already is!. I’ve enough trouble keeping the home / work / car balance in check with all the other local VW friends and racers I know as it is!
Peter
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The fastest beetle in the village
Shag55
Full Member
Posts: 220
Shag Leone, SL-1racing
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #544 on:
October 20, 2010, 16:30:29 pm »
I've been wanting to build a small-ish motor for some time now to make big HP up high. A 74x94 with 5.325 Eagle rods and JE skeletor pistons and asset of really short barells I have. The heads are 44x35.5 with tai valves, 7deg tai keepers and PSI springs and tight chambers, deck not cut yet. The ports are simaler to Chung Woo design the exhausts are smaller but should net a good I/E ratio. Berg 1.45 rockers and DT pushrods. The cam is up in the air as of yet but one grind in mind has 278 deg@.050 and .422 lift its a vary aggressive profile. Header will be a 1 5/8 steped to 1 3/4 but length not yet determined asim not good with calculations. Plans were to get it to 8-10k and in the 240Hp range. Any suggestions for the cam would be appreciated Johnnes.
Shag
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325hp and 290# torque @17psi on 91 pump
383hp and 324# torque @23psi on 50/50 mix
Shag55.sl1racing@gmail.com
Facebook at SL 1 racing
Johannes Persson
Jr. Member
Posts: 67
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #545 on:
October 20, 2010, 20:39:54 pm »
Hello Shag,
The OTEVA75 springs I use in my 1915 has 150-160lbs installed pressure and 350-360lbs at over the nose.
The cam is one of my Raptors which has 280+ deg at 0.05" and about .430 lift.
All my Raptors are brand new profiles, no copies from V8 or others.
They have all been designed to suit the valvetrain of acvw, that is why it's possible to reduce the spring pressure.
I design the valve lift profile in a very advanced computer software and from that file created the lobe is cnc machined.
That means that I can design a custom grind for a special performance goal and combo like yours in very short lead time and a fair price.
Most cam grinders copies a "master lobe" when grinding cams, to make a new master lobe is very expensive.
I don't have to do that when dealing with cnc grinding.
Send me an email and we can talk about it.
/Johannes
Logged
Eddie DVK
Hero Member
Posts: 867
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #546 on:
October 23, 2010, 07:03:39 am »
Quote from: Johannes Persson on October 20, 2010, 20:39:54 pm
Hello Shag,
The OTEVA75 springs I use in my 1915 has 150-160lbs installed pressure and 350-360lbs at over the nose.
The cam is one of my Raptors which has 280+ deg at 0.05" and about .430 lift.
All my Raptors are brand new profiles, no copies from V8 or others.
They have all been designed to suit the valvetrain of acvw, that is why it's possible to reduce the spring pressure.
I design the valve lift profile in a very advanced computer software and from that file created the lobe is cnc machined.
That means that I can design a custom grind for a special performance goal and combo like yours in very short lead time and a fair price.
Most cam grinders copies a "master lobe" when grinding cams, to make a new master lobe is very expensive.
I don't have to do that when dealing with cnc grinding.
Send me an email and we can talk about it.
/Johannes
Johannes, maybe a change you are going to make Type 4 cams in the future?
Kind Regards Edgar
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Regards Edgar
" Type 4, it is a completely different engine. You have to drive one to understand! "
Arnoud
Jr. Member
Posts: 71
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #547 on:
October 23, 2010, 10:03:29 am »
And make a autobahnproof highperformance type4 head while you're at it
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JIMP
Sr. Member
Posts: 338
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #548 on:
October 25, 2010, 13:49:21 pm »
Hello Edgar
send Johannes an e-mail, he does them anyway if he finds the blanks, he did for me recently a T4 turbo cam
Friendly
Dimitrios
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Harry/FDK
Hero Member
Posts: 3613
Every Rule Was Made To Break, Even Callook...
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #549 on:
October 26, 2010, 19:13:40 pm »
Quote from: Arnoud on October 23, 2010, 10:03:29 am
And make a autobahnproof highperformance type4 head while you're at it
Hmm.
Logged
Done ? Not Yet.
SSRT
Newbie
Posts: 19
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #550 on:
November 11, 2010, 19:48:27 pm »
Quote from: Johannes Persson on October 17, 2010, 20:25:47 pm
Hello,
This engine was built for at least 4 years ago as an R&D project.
It is designed to have peak power at 9000rpm and 14bar bmep, if I can hit this goals it will pump out 265hp or 138.4hp/lit.
Only small changes has been made since first build, it has mostly been sitting on my shelf but the plan is to race the engine for next season.
The pulls on the video is up to 9700rpm where the rew limiter kicks in, the power is 248hp at 8900rpm.
No special oiling mods are done, just ordinary full flow with 26mm pump and oil return into main gallery.
New header was tested today, 252hp at 9000rpm and keeps the power almost to 10000rpm.
There was also a 8hp increase at 7000rpm, I have only made the calibration of A/F maybe some improvements could be expected from calibration of the ignition curve which I will do the next days.
Next change will be "top shot" injectors, after that a custom made piston, which will raise the comp ratio to hopefully about 13:1.
I still have 13hp up to reach target, a 3-4% increase could be expected going from 11.2-13:1 in CR.
BTW I only use my std size OTEVA75 dual springs, valve lift is 16.3mm(0.641").
/Johannes
Really looking forward to see the result of these changes,- anyway very inpressive numbers as usual!!!
Good luck!
SS
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Udo
Hero Member
Posts: 2077
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #551 on:
November 11, 2010, 20:03:27 pm »
Looks like we have another mid 10 sec. car for next year
Udo
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www.Udobeckertuning.de
mast
Newbie
Posts: 1
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #552 on:
November 16, 2010, 17:36:59 pm »
edit
«
Last Edit: November 17, 2010, 13:54:03 pm by mast
»
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vintagewagenwerks
Full Member
Posts: 163
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #553 on:
November 26, 2010, 13:42:10 pm »
The hearing of the number 9600rpm is unbelievable but i know that engines can do this,i feel very scary when my 2007cc engine runs over 5000rpm ,because the noise goes through your brain.Respect for driving at this rpm.
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It´s better to burn out than to fade away.
reijo5
Jr. Member
Posts: 57
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #554 on:
November 27, 2010, 16:23:33 pm »
Quote from: Johannes Persson on October 14, 2010, 17:45:03 pm
Hello there,
Just a dyno pull of my 1915.
69mm Demello
JE pistons
5.4" rods
MS230 46x36 valves
11.2:1C/R
Raptor valvetrain
F1 throttle bodies
Motec M4 ecu
http://www.youtube.com/v/v0o4Yt6ew1M
Will soon be updated with raised c/r, top shot injectors and new header.
/Johannes Persson
Wooo that sounds fantastic, great work
Logged
Udo
Hero Member
Posts: 2077
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #555 on:
November 29, 2010, 19:31:12 pm »
Quote from: vintagewagenwerks on November 26, 2010, 13:42:10 pm
The hearing of the number 9600rpm is unbelievable but i know that engines can do this,i feel very scary when my 2007cc engine runs over 5000rpm ,because the noise goes through your brain.Respect for driving at this rpm.
Don't worry about it . this is not a small , but 2,4cc at 9000 :-)
http://www.youtube.com/v/b-r9sIim460
Udo
Logged
www.Udobeckertuning.de
TSAF
Jr. Member
Posts: 83
Italian toys - GERMAN WAR MACHINES
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #556 on:
December 21, 2010, 15:57:17 pm »
One quick question
I am thinking of building a new stronger engine for my 1964 beetle FIA approved rally car (
http://www.rallybugs.com/CSBeetle.htm
). Currently the car has a 1300cc engine which is quite strong but not as strong as the one I am thinking of. I would like to create a replica of the Swedish 1200s like the ones on the attachment. These are the Swedish VW 1200s, fitted with 1300 cc Okrasa (Oettinger) engines, Porsche 356 brake drums, plexi-glass windows, 84 liter petrol tanks. These cars were used in the 1964 Spa-Sofia-Liege Marathon race. I have bought the 356 brakes, bought the plexi-glass windows from a company in the UK (
http://www.plastics4performance.com/
), already bought a new ATL tank and much more, new bucket seats,. The point is to build an engine that will have an output close to 110-115bhp with max rpm 6500 and a gearbox that will keep the engine in the power all the time.
There is a circuit racer in Britain from the just campers team that is a 1300 with power output of 140bhp, but this engine will not be suitable for rallying.
All ideas are welcome
«
Last Edit: December 21, 2010, 16:24:15 pm by TSAF
»
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http://www.rallybugs.com/CSBeetle.htm
http://www.salzburgkaefer.at
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--Italian toys - GERMAN WAR MACHINES--
Udo
Hero Member
Posts: 2077
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #557 on:
December 21, 2010, 18:37:17 pm »
I have a customer in greece that has built an 1300 engine for rally racing . He got the heads and cam from me and has dynoed strong 130 hp . I think it is a good result for an engine that makes power in all rpm ranges and has good torque . So i think it is no problem
Udo
«
Last Edit: December 21, 2010, 18:41:50 pm by Udo
»
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www.Udobeckertuning.de
1946vw
Full Member
Posts: 105
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #558 on:
December 22, 2010, 04:43:32 am »
I have the first Dyno numbesr for the 1670cc 250hp and the FI is next.
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RFbuilt
Full Member
Posts: 244
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #559 on:
December 22, 2010, 11:55:25 am »
Quote from: Udo on December 21, 2010, 18:37:17 pm
I have a customer in greece that has built an 1300 engine for rally racing . He got the heads and cam from me and has dynoed strong 130 hp . I think it is a good result for an engine that makes power in all rpm ranges and has good torque . So i think it is no problem
Udo
thats some very nice numbers Udo..
and seeing it is rally use... that's some good longevity there
id bet its pure heaven to use on the street
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TSAF
Jr. Member
Posts: 83
Italian toys - GERMAN WAR MACHINES
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #560 on:
December 22, 2010, 12:43:11 pm »
Quote from: Udo on December 21, 2010, 18:37:17 pm
I have a customer in greece that has built an 1300 engine for rally racing . He got the heads and cam from me and has dynoed strong 130 hp . I think it is a good result for an engine that makes power in all rpm ranges and has good torque . So i think it is no problem
Udo
Udo we are your customer in Greece (
http://www.rallybugs.com/CSBeetle.htm
). A friend of ours is using the heads you made and your cam on his race car. The car is a 1970 model and not a 1964 like the one I am thinking of. Originally with Udos set up the engine made 90bhp on the dyno. Andreas though re-worked the chambers and changed the timing of the cam. After a lot of work, and a lot of trials the engine made a healthy 130bhp at 6850 rpm. Andreas also changed the combination of stroke and bore. The car has made 3 FIA races with very good results. This year a new gearbox will follow that will suit the engine a lot better.
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http://www.rallybugs.com/CSBeetle.htm
http://www.salzburgkaefer.at
http://www.germanlook.net
--Italian toys - GERMAN WAR MACHINES--
Udo
Hero Member
Posts: 2077
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #561 on:
December 22, 2010, 20:03:28 pm »
Ok , looked like you came from italy ...
I know another story but it is ok
Udo
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www.Udobeckertuning.de
dangerous
Sr. Member
Posts: 270
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #562 on:
December 22, 2010, 20:45:04 pm »
Quote from: 1946vw on December 22, 2010, 04:43:32 am
I have the first Dyno numbesr for the 1670cc 250hp and the FI is next.
Is that the 4 cam version brian?
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cbigpwr
Newbie
Posts: 28
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #563 on:
December 23, 2010, 18:46:41 pm »
Quote from: 1946vw on December 22, 2010, 04:43:32 am
I have the first Dyno numbesr for the 1670cc 250hp and the FI is next.
Are you going to hit the track in 2011?
Anthony D&A Racing
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1946vw
Full Member
Posts: 105
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #564 on:
December 24, 2010, 00:55:18 am »
yes
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cbigpwr
Newbie
Posts: 28
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #565 on:
December 24, 2010, 05:59:17 am »
Cool, can't wait to see it run.
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Peter Shattock
Sr. Member
Posts: 359
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #566 on:
January 03, 2011, 16:22:51 pm »
Better late than never, hopefully below you'll see a short clip of one of the 11.3's from Bugjam last year (thanks Frau) its not quite the best run, but you get the idea. For info the smoke off the line was clutch not tires, which gives you an idea why I had to change a centre disk at or after each of the 4 mettings I did this year.
Happy New Year All.
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The fastest beetle in the village
benssp
Hero Member
Posts: 1655
www.callookvw.com
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #567 on:
January 03, 2011, 18:08:58 pm »
I'm kind of missing that clutch smell which accompanied meal times at the track
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Bernard Newbury
Sr. Member
Posts: 396
9.50 @ 141 MPH
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #568 on:
January 03, 2011, 21:00:24 pm »
Quote from: benssp on January 03, 2011, 18:08:58 pm
I'm kind of missing that clutch smell which accompanied meal times at the track
Or even missing meals while changing clutchs/pressure plates
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Before you jump, check the depth.
H67bug
Sr. Member
Posts: 294
Re: Small powerhouses and old school
«
Reply #569 on:
January 03, 2011, 21:16:35 pm »
That looks/ sounds so crisp and straight!
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