~ wrote:Drew wrote:Thank you! do the valves set on 11 and 5 like my 05?
Yup, although the NEW school of thought dictates 8 and 4. More duration and less impact on closing. More better power and more better longevity.
124 wrote:~ wrote:Drew wrote:Thank you! do the valves set on 11 and 5 like my 05?
Yup, although the NEW school of thought dictates 8 and 4. More duration and less impact on closing. More better power and more better longevity.
OK...gimme the scoop. 8 & 4?
124 wrote:OK. So you are increasing duration and effective overlap without changing lift or valve separation angles (designed overlap). But I would have to see some data to fully "buy-in". My side of the 8 & 4 theory:
In general, increasing duration and overlap has benefits to high-RPM and detrimental affects to low-end and idle. (For others following think about a muscle car burping and chugging at an idle - ba-la-lup, ba-la-lup, etc). I think you would lose power in the usable range for the average "X" rider. A pro MX'er...maybe this could benefit.
As you know, cams are a tradeoff. They only work perfectly at one RPM. Your changing the duration and overlap (in this case increasing it) to improve durability? This has more holes in it than meets the eye imo. I would be skeptical to buy in to this one without some data to speak about. Maybe that's just my engineering tendency to doubt the manufacturer and design engineers. Not that they are all-knowing, but purposely changing the specs usually comes with consequences.
I could be persuaded to understand the slower velocity/improved durability, but...I don't know...could it be neglible? I would want to know what the effective decrease in valve velocity would be...the delta. If I had the cam profile, that would a relatively easy calculation. And along those same thoughts, what the effective change in duration/overlap.
I'm not drinkin the kool-aid yet...
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