Midget, et all,
In reply to requests for various formulas regarding racing/performance engine engineering, I am recommending the following books:
1 Performance Automotive Engine Math, by John Baechtel
2 Engine Airflow, by Harold Bettes
3 How to Choose Camshafts and Time Them for Maximum Power, by Des Hammill
These books are written in a more user friendly format for those who are NOT engineers. There is however, a level of math intensive understanding (beyond basic math concepts) that is required for the information in these books to be translated into:
useful information.An additional caution is in order here.
Useful engineering requires valid input information. That means no "guessing" about values. You need to know the actual numbers for the formulas to work, not some bench racing guessing. Have your heads flowed, your cam profiled, etc, etc, ad nauseum. Then your numbers will be useful.
One last thought, about one third of my "bright ideas" work out, and my track record is pretty good. Be prepared for the engineering to show that your combo/bright idea is
NOT a winner.
My experience in racing is that most of the time, engine engineering is used to eliminate poor design choices, solve an error related to an educated guess, and/or most often, CORRECT A FATAL FLAW, AFTER THE FACT......... Testing to destruction is the most expensive engine development program I know of, although there is an undeniable certainty about the results............
BTW, chilled, liquid, carbohydrate fueled "bench racing" is an activity I participate in all the time. I've found some excellent micro-brews that way!!!

Fordboy
P.S. If there are more of you who want a list of engineering level texts (or other texts) on this subject, send me a PM and I'll put together a list & post it up to Midget's Build Diary, or send it in a PM.