What is your definition of "too much oil" and in what circumstances do you use less oil than the factory marks on the dipstick?
For me the whole point of fitting a deep sump is to reduce oil LEVEL
You only need sufficient oil to ensure a constant supply at the pickup tube under all
driving conditions
There's no rule that states oil must be run to the top mark on the dipstick. On a stock
engine (no deep sump), the marks indicate factory recommended capacity. Fitting a deep
sump doesn't necessarily mean you must increase overall capacity by the equivalent extra
sump volume
Extreme example... if it were practical to fit a sump that extended downward to 1mm above
the road surface (maybe 10 quart?), I'd aim to run conservative capacity (3 to 4 quarts/litres)
but would have succeeded in dropping the LEVEL way below the crank. That would do all
sorts of good things for the engine. In the real world we have to be practical and take into
account ground clearance, potholes etc.
Drag racers can afford to go deeper and ideally keep all of the oil outside/below the crankcase
Some of the mods already discussed in this thread help reduce the amount of oil
pointlessly flying around inside the case (wrapped around the crank, stuffed up inside
the 3-4 rocker cover etc). If you can rely on that oil being efficiently returned to the
sump, you can afford to further reduce oil capacity, which has the added knock on effect of reducing oil level
For obvious reasons it's better to err on the cautious side, so my general (cautious) rule is...
1.5 quart sump - set to lower mark on dipstick
Larger sumps (3.5 & 4qt) - just touching the bottom of the stick
Never had a problem with that, street or strip
Droppping oil level from the top mark makes more power!
Seen it plenty of times on the dyno. If you have oil to the top mark and test the
motor at 6000rpm+ you generally see very aerated oil pumped out the breathers. Drop the
level, repeat the test and the puking stops... or at least reduces - depends on the
engine (oil mods, build quality, ring seal etc). Power gains may only be small but
happens due to the crank not getting as wrapped up in oil.
Which is easier.... running on land or in a swimming pool?
Anyone experimenting with even lower levels needs to make some oil
control/breather mods if they want to avoid sucking air and frying bearings.
Application has to be considered too.... a circuit car throws oil around in a different
manner to a drag car and has different requirements
Some of the mods people have discovered tend not to get shared, especially amongst the
circuit racers.... it probably cost them a few motors to find the tricks that work