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#21 | |
![]() Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: New Concord Kentucky
Posts: 184
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Graham |
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#22 | |
![]() Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Crystal Lake, IL
Posts: 7,180
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__________________
LGAFF 90 #966-150K miles-sold 92 #234-sold 1987 Callaway TT #17 1991 ZR-1 #1359 |
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#23 | |
![]() Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: New jersey
Posts: 153
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Mr Graham How would I correctly calculate the plenum volume needed for a 402, 650 HPish LT5? John |
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#24 |
![]() Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Alex VA
Posts: 1,080
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moving the coils and vacuum stuff out might allow a "bigger" dropped floor plenum. As I remember some of the frankenstein floor drop gained just a modest amount (10 or 15) on a max effort engine
I'd like to see what a fairly inexpensive individual runner ITB style intake could do. it would remove the inlet restriction , allow running a single injector with an aftermarket Megasquirt or something similar, and should work if the linkage is progressive and doesn't snap stuff open too quick. these are a cast iron beeotch to tune as the runners have to equalize and any slop in the linkages or blade stops will make for a bad idle. Not sure how feasible this would be, so perhaps Graham can indulge my wild fantasy of the ITB some of his finest work is in my bifurcation manifold, and we opened up the runners on the heads to 36.5 so we'll see what the old gal will pull soon. I also am trying some very nice summit 24 lb injectors for just a bit more headroom as the engine should push around 650 or so if all goes well. Needs more cam timing, but that will be another day. |
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#25 | |
![]() Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: New jersey
Posts: 153
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So the 36.5mm porting? is that on the housings only? does that mean a 36.5mm ball will drop thru? the plenum? mono runners or biforcated? |
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#26 | |
![]() Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Alex VA
Posts: 1,080
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no didn't sell it. we used the checker balls on each port in the head and were able to get 36.5 port matched the intake, I don't think demps revised the intake manifold porting, but we did do the "pho mono runner mod" with epoxy to get the mono runner look which I like I hope to get it finished up and back on the road this month. Meantime, I bought a procharged c5 to play with. Need something nice for spring!! |
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#27 |
![]() Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: New jersey
Posts: 153
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ok, Ron, I thought I read somewhere that the 390 was sold and went oversea to make room for the C5, my bad. sucks it has been down for so long.
It is amazing how long it takes to get these things lined out the way you want. I am almost there with collecting parts. Got the cams over the weekend and they look bada$$. I need to start test fitting everything together and makes sure everything plays nice. I think I will need to have the pistons fly cut and I need to finish the housing/plenum porting... then she can start to go together.. the 36.5 must be a scary thing to do, the 36mm takes 50mm brass balls to hog out a port that big without breaking something...lol |
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#28 |
![]() Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Fishers, IN
Posts: 812
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I realize I am in the vast minority, but I want to give my opinion on the subject. It is incorrect for one to try to correlate a certain port diameter to a "supported" horsepower for these engines. It's a fallacy that the port diameter is the limiting factor for ultimate power output. There is no equation to be had there.
Lot of people go very big. Big doesn't equal power, necessarily. Ultimate airflow is important, but not the only, constraint on horsepower output. 99% of folks limit the engines potential by camshaft choices, before the size of the ports ever become a constraint. Couple of examples. GM Indycar engine, 3.5-4.0L, upwards of 750 bhp in those days (1997-2000). I have a few parts and pieces from said engine. The inlet ports were well under 35mm each (Yet the heads flowed over 100 CFM per sq. in. of valve area--generally 39mm valves). 427 cu. in. LT5. "Well" north of 700 crank hp. inlet ports in the head averaged 35.2mm primary / 35.8mm secondary. 390 cfm. Port was already bigger in some areas or would have been even smaller. Injector housings averaged ~38mm because the top 1" was siamesed. The critical areas were quite a bit smaller. Total average diameter of the head+housing inlet tract was 37mm. Shape and airspeed matter more than total diameter. Some areas are not perfectly round in this inlet tract. So the old drop a ball bearing test would never work in this case. Todd |
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#29 | |
![]() Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: New jersey
Posts: 153
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If you do not measure your housings by a specific size in a specific area< how do you determine where and how much to port? Is it all do this and flow test and do that and then flow test? John |
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#30 | |
![]() Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Fishers, IN
Posts: 812
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Good luck. |
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