×

La venta termina hoyObtenga un 30% de descuento en cualquier curso (excepto paquetes)

Termina en --- --- ---

Vacuum for big cam NA Engine in Idle

Discusión general sobre construcción de motores

Publicaciones del foro

Cursos

Blog

Artículos técnicos

Hable sobre construcción de motores aquí. Nuevos productos, preguntas complejas o muestre su trabajo. Si se trata de construcción de motores, bienvenido.

= Hilos resueltos

Autor
1313 Vistas

Hi Guys,

i have built a 2 Liter high compression Engine (~14:1) with a 292° intake Cam and a 285° exhaust Cam from Cat Cams

(http://www.catcams.com/products/camshafts/datasheet.aspx?ENGINE_id=130&CAMSETUP_id=398&Language=english)

What numbers in vacuum do i need to expect ?

Currently at idle (1200 rpm) the Map sensor reads between 80 and 85 kPa.

The Baro sensor reads 101 kPa.

I think thats quite poor. What do you guys think for this kind of Setup ?

If this is an very unusual number even for big cam egines then, i might need to adjust my cams again.

I would expect you should be able to see 50-60 kPa at idle.

Can you close the throttle more? Are you sure you don't have any intake leaks?

Thanks, i will doublecheck all the gaskets.

Throttle is about 0,5-1,5% open (mostly 1%)

Maybe the Gasket directly behind the throttlebody should be exchanged.

If this does not solve the problem i need to adjust my cams right?

Do a smoke test of the manifold to look for leaks. There are low-cost smoke machines available:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QIGQGai5ngs

What ignition advance are you using? That makes a BIG difference and you can run a lot more under no, or light, loads compared to the full load timing!

@David, Thanks for the Hint.

@Gord, currently 42° BTDC (Stock Engine and Software it is 47° BTDC). It tought thats a good start :)

That should be plenty, but trying +/- 5 degrees may point towards an improvement.

Manually adjusting the AFR for best idle may also help, if you're using a 'target' the big cam's may be letting unused air through on overlap and, if so, the ECU may be enriching the mixture to try and compensate for what it sees as a 'lean' mixture?

If you have the camshafts timed correctly you shouldn't really need to adjust them. [edit] Oh, just had a thought, you did check the indicated and true TDC crankshaft positions aligned, and the corrected ignition 0 value also co-incided? That's a bit granny-egg, but sometimes missed.

Yes you are right with indicated and true TDC position. Unfortunately i did not check with a timing gun. Currently the TDC position for the ECU was calculated by me in ° , and teeth offset.

By the end of this week i will have it checked with a timing gun and can confirm if the timing was correct or if my calculation was off.

After that i will check with varying the timing in idle by +-5° and check the trends.

When i´m still way off 60kPa i´ll check the cam positions

Generalmente respondemos dentro de las 12 horas (a menudo antes)

¿Necesitar ayuda?

¿Necesitas ayuda para elegir un curso?

¿Tiene dificultades con el sitio web?

¿O necesita contactarnos por cualquier otro motivo?