Quote:
Originally Posted by Dissident
Todd,
Someone mentioned that the thing would live.....but recent history doesn't support that notion. If you were running on the dyno at 600rpm/sec and going from 4000 to 7500, that only takes 5.833 seconds at 300rpm/sec twice that time. SO, if you total the pulls in time, that is not a livable package.Normal lifter to bore clearances is where a normal leak occurs. If it is sloppy, as an example 0.002", that leakage is approx equal to a jet of about 0.058" diameter oer lifter bore/lifter and that is additional to the groove that somebody increased the leakage path with. That flow number would scare most folks.Not a good package at all. IF you had the block reamed and honed for larger lifters, it would probably take a 0.904" lifter to clean up the groove leak. Yeah, not legal, but might save the block but would cost for another set of lifters and the cost of increasing the lifter bores. BTW - all that leakage and resultant deluge drops right down on the rotating assembly and the windage losses go up exponentially with RPM.
Best of luck to you and Autumn. Hope you get to race soon.
Regards,
HB2 
Dissident
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In my mind, the only difference between then and now, is lifters. These lifters have two real differences from the old lifters, the oil flowing from the edm hole and the extra oil pumped to the top (which I believe is more than the edm hole flow). So if I restrict the oil so less goes to the top and I plug the edm holes (or get non edm lifters) that should get me back to square one. I could even add a hv pump for insurance. Thanks for the replies.