Dyno - prep.
One of the things I'm looking to accomplish is ringing every last ounce out of the Grenade this year.
And that was a wacky deal. Most A-series cams run between 100 and 106 degrees, Elgin's recommendation is 108, so the timing marks wound up being at the very end of the slotted adjustment. Each adjustment slot gives you 18 degrees of variance at the crank - the equivalent of 1 tooth on a forty tooth cam drive. Moving the gear one tooth on the belt simply bumped the problem to the other end of the slot. I'm tearing my hair out, thinking I'll need to have longer slots cut in it, when I realized that the adjusting screws were set on 60 degree centerlines. I reset the arbor and wound up smack dab in the middle of the slots, with room to advance or retard the cam.
Wednesday, I'll check valve to piston clearance.
Shooting for May 21st for dyno day.
Should we ask Slim if he'd like to see another Dynothon? I've got a crank scraper on the way, new exhaust valves, a different header, an electric water pump drive. We made 95.1 last year - I'm thinking 100 might actually be doable this time.
Chris
Yep 108° is where I would go
G
midget,
Elgin wanted you to run a cam with tighter LCA, something in the 102/104 degree range. Problem was, that a conventional cam grind like that simply will not fit in a 999cc BMC short stroke race engine. Vizard recommended 111/113 LCA, which would have given more valve to piston clearance, but nobody wanted to grind a cam with that wide an LCA, including APT. Too "unconventional" . . . . . . (Like a BMC for I/GT was a "conventional" idea . . . . . .

)
Last year during "Dynothon", most of the time was spent making sure:
A/ Various bits were working or modified properly, (ie: the valve-train . . . . ),
2/ The "inherent" self-destruction tendencies of BMC's was under control,
d/ Substituting parts to get the bhp curve up into the minimum range needed for competitive speeds in I/GT.
There is no question that 2013 was your best year to date . . . . . that wasn't luck, it was the result of a
LOT of hard work, testing & preparation.
2 things are going to determine where the cam timing and valve lash end up:
1/ Workable valve to piston clearance. You (we) were already pushing the limit . . . . .
2/ Shape of the torque & bhp curves. I want to see the torque curve pushed up and to the right on the output graphs. It is unlikely that the torque will go up more than a
ft/lb or two, because the specification (and CR) is "about" the same. Later intake valve closing, (retarding the cam from where it was @ 105.? degrees) and the bigger
exhaust header are two things that will accomplish this goal.
These things will also "probably" narrow the rpm band between peak torque and peak bhp, limiting the useful rpm range and "possibly" making the beast more difficult to drive. We will see. The biggest tuning issue here is that the "Grenade" has not responded to tuning changes in the ways usually predicted by BMC "Experts" for 970S variants. The results obtained have followed the path typically seen from "big valve/big bore/big displacement" engines.
But it is also time to go for broke . . . . . and to that end, I've heard a rumor you will be importing a "professional axe man". I'm unsure how he will react to all the "room" in the "Milwaukee Midget" . . . . . . .

or the abundance of beer . . . . . .

BTW, the best thing about "Krover",
NO HARLAN SHARP ROCKERS NEEDED!!

4valveboy