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Valve springs

Started by metallicareload99, February 13, 2018, 01:44:33 PM

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metallicareload99

I'm concerned that my valve springs might be too weak for my current application:

- 440, .030 over, Trick-Flow heads
- Trick Flow dual valve springs that are stock for the head with 10° steel valve retainers. Shimmed to produce 170 lbs on the seat, 420 pounds per inch spring rate.
- Crane bushed ductile iron rockers
- Isky solid roller, 292° advertised, 258° @ 0.050, .590 lift, 0.393 lobe lift. Hot lash .028. 110° LSA. Grind R-797
- Primarily a street car

I have already put around 1300 miles with this setup, I haven't noticed any problems yet, but I have the engine tore down and now would be the time.  If a stronger spring is needed, would the Comp 933 spring be a good choice?

Comp 933
- 171 pounds @ 1.950
- 492 pounds @ 1.300
494 pounds per inch

Thanks for any advice
1968, When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth

68CoronetRT

Depends. How much spring pressure can your springs handle?

I had a valve spring break on me and I'm not sure what it was rated for but I was like .33 inches of lift above what they could handle and they finally gave out.

I'd call Trick Flow and ask them about it.

BSB67

Probably okay.  Consider the Isky 9315 springs.  It's a better spring, but it'll cost more too.

500" NA, Eddy head, pump gas, exhaust manifold with 2 1/2 exhaust with tailpipes
4150 lbs with driver, 3.23 gear, stock converter
11.68 @ 120.2 mph

PRH

You only need what you need.......and more than that just wears out parts faster.

I'd call Isky and see what they recommend for spring loads with that cam, the rocker ratio you're running, and the max rpm you want to turn and see if your current springs meet those specs.

If not...... Time for an upgrade.

Keep in mind with a solid roller........ A little too much is safer than not quite enough.

As a very general rule for a BB running a solid roller cam, I rarely would use anything less than 200/500.
Porter Racing Heads......Building and racing Mopars since 1980

metallicareload99

Thanks for the responses, I'm using a 1.5 rocker ratio. Because I have L2355F30 on LY rods(ARP rod bolts, main studs), I'm making an effort to keep the rpm down. But I'm guessing peak power will be around 6500 (or more?), so I'd like to make use of that rpm occasionally

Isky suggested 210 or so on the seat and around 500-550 open. Which is a lot more than I've been running. I'll order those Isky 9315 springs soon. With the Trick Flow stock installed height of 1.950, I think those Isky springs will be around 180 pounds on the seat. If I use the shims I have now, they'll be around 200 pounds on the seat with 1.900" installed height, so I think I should use them?

Also with the 0.590 lift before lash, by my math, I'll never get to the 550 lbs open pressure unless I used a spring with 600+ pounds per inch rate.

By the numbers this cam doesn't seem too extreme, but I know there is more to it than lift and duration

Thanks again
1968, When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth

PRH

If you have 1.950 installed height, just use the 9365's instead of the 9315's.
Porter Racing Heads......Building and racing Mopars since 1980

metallicareload99

Quote from: PRH on February 16, 2018, 12:02:04 PM
If you have 1.950 installed height, just use the 9365's instead of the 9315's.

Thanks PRH. Any reason not to get the 9365-SP springs for my application? At the moment a set of those is more easily acquired than regular 9365
1968, When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth

PRH

The SP's are fine, it's just finishing process upgrade.
Porter Racing Heads......Building and racing Mopars since 1980

metallicareload99

Thank you for the advice!
1968, When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth

metallicareload99

Update: after around 3,000+ miles it seems a few Isky 9365 springs have lost 10-20 pounds on the seat pressure  :'(  Trying to see if these are still ok? Probably not.

Looking to see if there are "better" springs out there today? Is 460 lbs/inch an acceptable rate?
1968, When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth

INTMD8

Quote from: metallicareload99 on February 15, 2018, 12:09:48 PM
Isky suggested 210 or so on the seat and around 500-550 open.

Quote from: metallicareload99 on December 03, 2020, 12:33:12 AM
Update: after around 3,000+ miles it seems a few Isky 9365 springs have lost 10-20 pounds on the seat pressure  :'(  Trying to see if these are still ok? Probably not.

So you're now at 150 on the seat and what, 440 over the nose? (for .590 lift rather than the .650 lift open pressure you listed)

I don't think that's anywhere close to being ok.  I would run what Isky recommends as it's their cam or another quality spring to at least match their pressure recommendation.

I prefer PSI springs but there are other good brands as well.
69 Charger. 438ci Gen2 hemi. Flex fuel. Holley HP efi. 595rwhp 475rwtq

metallicareload99

Quote from: INTMD8 on December 03, 2020, 11:49:07 AM
Quote from: metallicareload99 on February 15, 2018, 12:09:48 PM
Isky suggested 210 or so on the seat and around 500-550 open.

Quote from: metallicareload99 on December 03, 2020, 12:33:12 AM
Update: after around 3,000+ miles it seems a few Isky 9365 springs have lost 10-20 pounds on the seat pressure  :'(  Trying to see if these are still ok? Probably not.

So you're now at 150 on the seat and what, 440 over the nose? (for .590 lift rather than the .650 lift open pressure you listed)

I don't think that's anywhere close to being ok.  I would run what Isky recommends as it's their cam or another quality spring to at least match their pressure recommendation.

I prefer PSI springs but there are other good brands as well.

My bad, I did indeed have the Isky 9365 springs replace those softer ones I mention in my first post. The Isky 9365 were installed at 215 lbs (to the best of my memory) on the seat. I made a point of asking the machine shop to have the springs installed at the minum of the 210+ recommended on the seat.

I have been testing my springs with the LSM on engine tester (as is out of the box).  After assembling the engine I tested the springs with the LSM and most springs measured @ 180 and a few 190s. I know that didn't match what the springs were installed at, per the spring spec and what I asked the machine shop for, but they were all consistent (although reading 25-35 pounds lower consistently).

I know the LSM could have been adjusted when the springs were brand new to match what the new springs were installed at back then, but I didn't want to mess around with the testers settings. Not knowing if there is something wrong with my technique or if the tool should be "calibrated" to my particular 440? Now with the same tester, I'm measuring the springs at 160 to 180 range consistently, using the same technique
1968, When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth

INTMD8

Ah, gotcha.  I've only tested springs off an engine so I have no advice to offer there. Maybe pull one to confirm installed height and to compare pressure with a bench spring tester?
69 Charger. 438ci Gen2 hemi. Flex fuel. Holley HP efi. 595rwhp 475rwtq

metallicareload99

Quote from: INTMD8 on December 03, 2020, 12:41:20 PM
Ah, gotcha.  I've only tested springs off an engine so I have no advice to offer there. Maybe pull one to confirm installed height and to compare pressure with a bench spring tester?

Yeah, "ideally," back then I should have adjusted the LSM so it matched the 215 on seat pressure, trusting that the 1.950" installed height and 215 on the seat spec was met.

It might be best to replace all these now and check installed height. Just not too enthused about these springs maybe only lasting 3000 miles
1968, When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth

Challenger340

Quote from: metallicareload99 on December 03, 2020, 01:12:06 PM
Quote from: INTMD8 on December 03, 2020, 12:41:20 PM
Ah, gotcha.  I've only tested springs off an engine so I have no advice to offer there. Maybe pull one to confirm installed height and to compare pressure with a bench spring tester?

Yeah, "ideally," back then I should have adjusted the LSM so it matched the 215 on seat pressure, trusting that the 1.950" installed height and 215 on the seat spec was met.

It might be best to replace all these now and check installed height. Just not too enthused about these springs maybe only lasting 3000 miles

You are aware that there are street Roller Cam profiles ?.... and Race Roller Cam profiles ?

Camshafts calling for 200+ Seat Pressures and 500-550 Inch/Lb V/Spring rates.... are NOT designed/recommended for extended street usage.... hence those V/Springs losing pressure in that environment is quite normal ?
You are probably also very lucky....
that you didn't start 'ramping' the Lifters as V/Spring pressure decreased.... then ending up with an Oil Pan full of broken Lifter Trunions and a destroyed engine ?

Seeing as how your V/Springs were that weak ? and you were rpm'ing the engine ?
It may be a good idea to get your Roller Lifters checked/rebuilt as well if you wish to run that style of Race Roller profile on the Street
Only wimps wear Bowties !

metallicareload99

Quote from: Challenger340 on December 03, 2020, 05:07:30 PM
Quote from: metallicareload99 on December 03, 2020, 01:12:06 PM
Quote from: INTMD8 on December 03, 2020, 12:41:20 PM
Ah, gotcha.  I've only tested springs off an engine so I have no advice to offer there. Maybe pull one to confirm installed height and to compare pressure with a bench spring tester?

Yeah, "ideally," back then I should have adjusted the LSM so it matched the 215 on seat pressure, trusting that the 1.950" installed height and 215 on the seat spec was met.

It might be best to replace all these now and check installed height. Just not too enthused about these springs maybe only lasting 3000 miles

You are aware that there are street Roller Cam profiles ?.... and Race Roller Cam profiles ?

Camshafts calling for 200+ Seat Pressures and 500-550 Inch/Lb V/Spring rates.... are NOT designed/recommended for extended street usage.... hence those V/Springs losing pressure in that environment is quite normal ?
You are probably also very lucky....
that you didn't start 'ramping' the Lifters as V/Spring pressure decreased.... then ending up with an Oil Pan full of broken Lifter Trunions and a destroyed engine ?

Seeing as how your V/Springs were that weak ? and you were rpm'ing the engine ?
It may be a good idea to get your Roller Lifters checked/rebuilt as well if you wish to run that style of Race Roller profile on the Street

About as aware as any other ammature  :shruggy:  I don't know how this cam fits in on the street vs race spectrum.  I hear what you are saying though. Because of what you guys are saying, and what I know about this engine I really haven't ran this engine that hard, yet...

Short story long, I was talked into this cam by the machine shop that built my short block.  My plan was solid flat tappet, but here we are
1968, When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth

Challenger340

I looked up the R797 Grind, it is an Oval Track Roller with probably at least 'some' intention given to durability/reliability for the Oval Track environment, nonetheless, most probably still wanting 200+ # seat pressure and at least 500#/in rate, and IMO.... if you are going to use it in the street environment even for limited mileages yearly some DO's and DO NOT's are in order for that grind to lessen V/Spring wear & tear and fade.

Always thermally stabilize the V/Springs before any rpm whatsoever.
This means NO rpm's until the V/Springs are warm..... meaning start the engine and allow it to bump & fart around @ 1,000 rpm until the temperature gauges gets into operating range, about 10-15 minutes. Do NOT "rev" the engine during this warm up period.
Then shut the engine OFF
and allow the Heat to soak UP into the V/Springs for another 10 minutes..... because remember the only way the V/Springs warm up is by 'conducting' the heat from the Head where they sit on the V/Spring Pad.
Then, restart the Engine and away you go.

Subsequent restarts throughout the day shouldn't be a problem as long as the V/Springs are still warm..... the learning curve here for BEST V/Spring life is DO NOT "REV" COLD V/Springs !
and,
that just because the Temperature gauge come up and says 180*.... the V/Springs are still dead nuts COLD !
Remember it takes "time" for them to conduct and Heat soak before rpm'ing them !
Only wimps wear Bowties !

INTMD8

.393 lobe and .590 at the valve is falling into race category these days?

I've ran 200 seat 450+open on many street hydraulic roller engines. Never ran into a problem on those so 200/500 doesn't seem crazy to me for a street use engine that isn't going to see 20k miles a year.

Really I'm surprised to hear that there are solid roller setups out there running significantly less than that. (or assuming that based on the above pressures being too high for -street- category)

I have mine set up at 250/600 with .630 on the intake. Only plan on a few thousand miles a year though  :shruggy:
69 Charger. 438ci Gen2 hemi. Flex fuel. Holley HP efi. 595rwhp 475rwtq

cdr

Quote from: INTMD8 on December 03, 2020, 09:09:01 PM
.393 lobe and .590 at the valve is falling into race category these days?

I've ran 200 seat 450+open on many street hydraulic roller engines. Never ran into a problem on those so 200/500 doesn't seem crazy to me for a street use engine that isn't going to see 20k miles a year.

Really I'm surprised to hear that there are solid roller setups out there running significantly less than that. (or assuming that based on the above pressures being too high for -street- category)

I have mine set up at 250/600 with .630 on the intake. Only plan on a few thousand miles a year though  :shruggy:

all this that you have done in the past with other engines,, were they MOPARS ??? asking for a friend . or was it LS Chevy stuff
LINK TO MY STORY http://www.onallcylinders.com/2015/11/16/ride-shares-charlie-keel-battles-cancer-ms-to-build-brilliant-1968-dodge-charger/  
                                                                                           
68 Charger 512 cid,9.7to1,Hilborn EFI,Home ported 440 source heads,small hyd roller cam,COLD A/C ,,a518 trans,Dana 60 ,4.10 gear,10.93 et,4100lbs on street tires full exhaust daily driver
Charger55 by Charlie Keel, on Flickr

INTMD8

Quote from: cdr on December 03, 2020, 09:19:02 PM
Quote from: INTMD8 on December 03, 2020, 09:09:01 PM
.393 lobe and .590 at the valve is falling into race category these days?

I've ran 200 seat 450+open on many street hydraulic roller engines. Never ran into a problem on those so 200/500 doesn't seem crazy to me for a street use engine that isn't going to see 20k miles a year.

Really I'm surprised to hear that there are solid roller setups out there running significantly less than that. (or assuming that based on the above pressures being too high for -street- category)

I have mine set up at 250/600 with .630 on the intake. Only plan on a few thousand miles a year though  :shruggy:

all this that you have done in the past with other engines,, were they MOPARS ??? asking for a friend . or was it LS Chevy stuff

Yes it was LS and LT.  So is an .842 lifter stronger than .903 and does a valve spring know what kind of engine it's in?  Also, what load does the lifter see with the same spring pressure with 1.7 or 1.8 rocker vs 1.5.   Asking for a friend.
69 Charger. 438ci Gen2 hemi. Flex fuel. Holley HP efi. 595rwhp 475rwtq

metallicareload99

Quote from: Challenger340 on December 03, 2020, 06:18:36 PM
I looked up the R797 Grind, it is an Oval Track Roller with probably at least 'some' intention given to durability/reliability for the Oval Track environment, nonetheless, most probably still wanting 200+ # seat pressure and at least 500#/in rate, and IMO.... if you are going to use it in the street environment even for limited mileages yearly some DO's and DO NOT's are in order for that grind to lessen V/Spring wear & tear and fade.

Always thermally stabilize the V/Springs before any rpm whatsoever.
This means NO rpm's until the V/Springs are warm..... meaning start the engine and allow it to bump & fart around @ 1,000 rpm until the temperature gauges gets into operating range, about 10-15 minutes. Do NOT "rev" the engine during this warm up period.
Then shut the engine OFF
and allow the Heat to soak UP into the V/Springs for another 10 minutes..... because remember the only way the V/Springs warm up is by 'conducting' the heat from the Head where they sit on the V/Spring Pad.
Then, restart the Engine and away you go.

Subsequent restarts throughout the day shouldn't be a problem as long as the V/Springs are still warm..... the learning curve here for BEST V/Spring life is DO NOT "REV" COLD V/Springs !
and,
that just because the Temperature gauge come up and says 180*.... the V/Springs are still dead nuts COLD !
Remember it takes "time" for them to conduct and Heat soak before rpm'ing them !

Will do! I've used a shorter version of that warm up routine quite a bit over the years up here.

I was surprised to find that this was a oval track grind. For a MoPar. A Big Block MoPar. Who the hell races a big block MoPar this side of the bicentennial (1976 for nonamericans)?!?!


Quote from: INTMD8 on December 03, 2020, 09:09:01 PM
.393 lobe and .590 at the valve is falling into race category these days?

I've ran 200 seat 450+open on many street hydraulic roller engines. Never ran into a problem on those so 200/500 doesn't seem crazy to me for a street use engine that isn't going to see 20k miles a year.

Really I'm surprised to hear that there are solid roller setups out there running significantly less than that. (or assuming that based on the above pressures being too high for -street- category)

I have mine set up at 250/600 with .630 on the intake. Only plan on a few thousand miles a year though  :shruggy:

200/500 does seem to be the "minimum" for solid rollers.

I genuinely don't know what kind of street mileage people are getting out of their springs, regardless of make, I agree the spring doesn't know what engine it's in
1968, When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth

cdr

Quote from: INTMD8 on December 03, 2020, 10:29:02 PM
Quote from: cdr on December 03, 2020, 09:19:02 PM
Quote from: INTMD8 on December 03, 2020, 09:09:01 PM
.393 lobe and .590 at the valve is falling into race category these days?

I've ran 200 seat 450+open on many street hydraulic roller engines. Never ran into a problem on those so 200/500 doesn't seem crazy to me for a street use engine that isn't going to see 20k miles a year.

Really I'm surprised to hear that there are solid roller setups out there running significantly less than that. (or assuming that based on the above pressures being too high for -street- category)

I have mine set up at 250/600 with .630 on the intake. Only plan on a few thousand miles a year though  :shruggy:



all this that you have done in the past with other engines,, were they MOPARS ??? asking for a friend . or was it LS Chevy stuff

Yes it was LS and LT.  So is an .842 lifter stronger than .903 and does a valve spring know what kind of engine it's in?  Also, what load does the lifter see with the same spring pressure with 1.7 or 1.8 rocker vs 1.5.   Asking for a friend.

Give me a BREAK LOL,,, No but oiling systems & lifter quality ,the machined SHORT lifter hole in the block that gets oblonged out of round & leaks oil pressure, Just ask Bob Challenger340 , Dwayne Porter, MYSELF with the problems I have had , you cant tell me you have not read all the problems running a hydo cam in a mopar can be, not trying to argue BUT how many miles on your Hemi, are the lifter bores BUSHED
LINK TO MY STORY http://www.onallcylinders.com/2015/11/16/ride-shares-charlie-keel-battles-cancer-ms-to-build-brilliant-1968-dodge-charger/  
                                                                                           
68 Charger 512 cid,9.7to1,Hilborn EFI,Home ported 440 source heads,small hyd roller cam,COLD A/C ,,a518 trans,Dana 60 ,4.10 gear,10.93 et,4100lbs on street tires full exhaust daily driver
Charger55 by Charlie Keel, on Flickr

INTMD8

LMAO, give you a break? I don't see how your points have any relevance to this discussion.

What is considered a streetable solid roller and comparing those pressures to hydraulics I've ran as a comparison doesn't mean I'm recommending a hydraulic roller here and has nothing to do with lifter bores that are out of round and need to be bushed.

What does the lifter bore in my engine have to do with this discussion?

I was using the hydro roller as a comparison to what I've found is streetable.

I usually don't use less than 160/400 on a hydraulic roller which led me to say, is 200/500 and .590 lift really approaching race category? As that would seem rather streetable to me unless it has crazy lobe intensity which doesn't sound like this is the case.

So then, what is considered a street solid roller? Are people running similar to what I like to see on a hydraulic setup? (160/400)  

If so, once again that would surprise me but do not know.  Maybe with a conical spring?  

Sooooo sorry CDR for discussing spring pressures on a discussion forum thread labeled "Valve springs"!!!




69 Charger. 438ci Gen2 hemi. Flex fuel. Holley HP efi. 595rwhp 475rwtq

cdr

Quote from: INTMD8 on December 04, 2020, 11:15:47 AM
LMAO, give you a break? I don't see how your points have any relevance to this discussion.

What is considered a streetable solid roller and comparing those pressures to hydraulics I've ran as a comparison doesn't mean I'm recommending a hydraulic roller here and has nothing to do with lifter bores that are out of round and need to be bushed.

What does the lifter bore in my engine have to do with this discussion?

I was using the hydro roller as a comparison to what I've found is streetable.

I usually don't use less than 160/400 on a hydraulic roller which led me to say, is 200/500 and .590 lift really approaching race category? As that would seem rather streetable to me unless it has crazy lobe intensity which doesn't sound like this is the case.

So then, what is considered a street solid roller? Are people running similar to what I like to see on a hydraulic setup? (160/400)  

If so, once again that would surprise me but do not know.  Maybe with a conical spring?  

Sooooo sorry CDR for discussing spring pressures on a discussion forum thread labeled "Valve springs"!!!






YOU, NOT ME brought it up 
Quote from YOU

I've ran 200 seat 450+open on many street hydraulic roller engines. Never ran into a problem on those so 200/500 doesn't seem crazy to me for a street use engine that isn't going to see 20k miles a year.
LINK TO MY STORY http://www.onallcylinders.com/2015/11/16/ride-shares-charlie-keel-battles-cancer-ms-to-build-brilliant-1968-dodge-charger/  
                                                                                           
68 Charger 512 cid,9.7to1,Hilborn EFI,Home ported 440 source heads,small hyd roller cam,COLD A/C ,,a518 trans,Dana 60 ,4.10 gear,10.93 et,4100lbs on street tires full exhaust daily driver
Charger55 by Charlie Keel, on Flickr

Challenger340

Quote from: INTMD8 on December 04, 2020, 11:15:47 AM
LMAO, give you a break? I don't see how your points have any relevance to this discussion.

What is considered a streetable solid roller and comparing those pressures to hydraulics I've ran as a comparison doesn't mean I'm recommending a hydraulic roller here and has nothing to do with lifter bores that are out of round and need to be bushed.

What does the lifter bore in my engine have to do with this discussion?

I was using the hydro roller as a comparison to what I've found is streetable.

I usually don't use less than 160/400 on a hydraulic roller which led me to say, is 200/500 and .590 lift really approaching race category? As that would seem rather streetable to me unless it has crazy lobe intensity which doesn't sound like this is the case.

So then, what is considered a street solid roller? Are people running similar to what I like to see on a hydraulic setup? (160/400)  

If so, once again that would surprise me but do not know.  Maybe with a conical spring?  

Sooooo sorry CDR for discussing spring pressures on a discussion forum thread labeled "Valve springs"!!!






length of the Lifter Bore around the Lifter assists in Hydraulic Oil Pressure sealing..... hence, why the first consideration for Chase Knight and CRANE back in the early 80's when they did the first R & D for Ford on contract(you may remember Ford were then first to introduce HR cams in production).... was to lengthen the Lifter Bores on the production 5.0L Blocks
which...
once GM went to HR's they followed the same and lengthened their Blocks Lifter Bores for the same reason

But we're off topic.... and like the old saying "no point arguing with an idiot on the internet".... and I don't wish to be deemed an idiot in anyone else's eyes either ?
so....
I will digress anyone reading this to PHONE Comp Cams, CRANE, ISKY... or whomever they choose.... and ask them WHY they make the distinction.... and have STREET Roller Profiles and RACE Roller profiles in their catalogs ?
if all Rollers are Recommended by them for extended STREET driving ?

As always....
anyone should DO.... whatever THEY feel is best.... it's YOUR Engine !

I've ran 200 seat 450+open on many street hydraulic roller engines. Never ran into a problem on those so 200/500 doesn't seem crazy to me for a street use engine that isn't going to see 20k miles a year.
LOL
I would humbly suggest 200 seat and 500 over the nose probably NOT work real well in a BB Mopar HR application ? But I've been wrong before so knock yourself out ?
May I suggest that prior to doing so ?
you may wish to go LOOK in the BB Mopar Lifter Bore at the distance between the bottom of the Oil Gallery and the bottom of the Bore itself ? to SEE the problem trying to seal Oil Pressure against 200# seat and 500# V/Spring open pressures @ rpm ?

Only wimps wear Bowties !

INTMD8

CDR, yes that is what I said.

For the third time now, to compare to SR spring pressure. (as in, am I running more pressure on hydraulic stuff than some are on solid?) Should be easy to see that is a pressure comparison and not in any way me saying "put a hydraulic roller in it". The comparison was to say that I've ran those spring pressures and have had no issues with them wearing out.  Did one 10 years ago with 200 on the seat, mild lobes and in that amount of time and 20k miles it lost 5lbs on the seat.  Pretty mild turbo car that runs 9's.

I was hoping for a discussion, not an argument ( but then I get "asking for a friend" bullshit thrown in my face. )


If someone runs much lower pressures than what I'm stating on a solid roller I'm not trying to argue that it's impossible, I was merely posing a question

Completely agreed there are street and race profiles. When I asked cam motion to grind mine I asked for mild low lash lobes for street use.  Bob recommended 240-260 seat and 600-650 over the nose for that.   

Lobe lift and base circle was decided by first measuring lifter oil band location and oil gallery relief in the lifter bore as they are unbushed. It is now .100 away from uncovering the oil gallery on both the base circle and on the nose, no visible excessive oil flow at any position when priming the oil pump.  Lifters .9035-.9036  lifter bores .9052.

I made the decision to do this as I wanted to turn it 7500+.   

If guys are running solid roller setups with much less than say 200/500 do they still rpm 7k+ or is it for a limited rpm application?

If so and the spring pressure is very light, I would have to ask if it's worth going roller at all at that point as you could probably run even lighter springs for a lower rpm engine and have little/lower risk of wiping out a flat tappet.
















69 Charger. 438ci Gen2 hemi. Flex fuel. Holley HP efi. 595rwhp 475rwtq

cdr

Quote from: INTMD8 on December 04, 2020, 12:31:33 PM
CDR, yes that is what I said.

For the third time now, to compare to SR spring pressure. (as in, am I running more pressure on hydraulic stuff than some are on solid?) Should be easy to see that is a pressure comparison and not in any way me saying "put a hydraulic roller in it". The comparison was to say that I've ran those spring pressures and have had no issues with them wearing out.  Did one 10 years ago with 200 on the seat, mild lobes and in that amount of time and 20k miles it lost 5lbs on the seat.  Pretty mild turbo car that runs 9's.

I was hoping for a discussion, not an argument ( but then I get "asking for a friend" bullshit thrown in my face. )


If someone runs much lower pressures than what I'm stating on a solid roller I'm not trying to argue that it's impossible, I was merely posing a question

Completely agreed there are street and race profiles. When I asked cam motion to grind mine I asked for mild low lash lobes for street use.  Bob recommended 240-260 seat and 600-650 over the nose for that.   

Lobe lift and base circle was decided by first measuring lifter oil band location and oil gallery relief in the lifter bore as they are unbushed. It is now .100 away from uncovering the oil gallery on both the base circle and on the nose, no visible excessive oil flow at any position when priming the oil pump.  Lifters .9035-.9036  lifter bores .9052.

I made the decision to do this as I wanted to turn it 7500+.   

If guys are running solid roller setups with much less than say 200/500 do they still rpm 7k+ or is it for a limited rpm application?

If so and the spring pressure is very light, I would have to ask if it's worth going roller at all at that point as you could probably run even lighter springs for a lower rpm engine and have little/lower risk of wiping out a flat tappet.

















I was hoping for a discussion, not an argument ( but then I get "asking for a friend" bullshit thrown in my face.
--------------- 
JUST to clarify ,,, if you knew me & we were not on a keyboard, you would have see me SMILE when I said asking for a friend , not fighting or arguing, maybe my old man Southern sarcasm/poking the bear is hard to pick up on through a keyboard,  INTMD8  I enjoy reading your post on here & other forms we are on, I in NO way intended to come off talking down to you.
LINK TO MY STORY http://www.onallcylinders.com/2015/11/16/ride-shares-charlie-keel-battles-cancer-ms-to-build-brilliant-1968-dodge-charger/  
                                                                                           
68 Charger 512 cid,9.7to1,Hilborn EFI,Home ported 440 source heads,small hyd roller cam,COLD A/C ,,a518 trans,Dana 60 ,4.10 gear,10.93 et,4100lbs on street tires full exhaust daily driver
Charger55 by Charlie Keel, on Flickr

INTMD8

I enjoy reading your posts as well CDR and I apologize if I misconstrued your meaning.

:cheers:
69 Charger. 438ci Gen2 hemi. Flex fuel. Holley HP efi. 595rwhp 475rwtq

Challenger340

As a general 'rule of thumb' with Camshafts.... the faster we can whack the Valve open = the more power we can make ?
hence why...
Hydraulic Flat Tappet Cams being slower ramp speeds make less power than similar duration @ .050" Solid Flat Tappet Cams
and
.842" Diameter Solid Flat Tappet Cams being slower ramp speeds make less power than what can be done with .904" Lifter Diameter Flat Tappet Cams
and
Hydraulic Roller Camshafts being slower ramp speeds make less power than Solid Roller Cam profiles.... which we can then also distinguish between STREET Solid Rollers being slower ramps making less power than their much faster RACE Roller ramp speeds

The LEARNING curve here being....
always look to the "required" V/Spring pressure being called for by the Cam Manufacturer as an indication of the Lobe ramp speeds(how FAST the Valve is being whacked open).... as a determination of how aggressive the V/Springs need to be to maintain Lifters/Rockers and Valvetrain components "stable" through the intended rpm range so as NOT to damage parts !
and above therein....
lays the pitfalls of trying to run RACE Roller profiles and ramp speeds in the street environment ?
It's NOT the Cam... it's NOT the Lifters....
it is the V/Springs that typically GO AWAY with the 200+ Seat Pressures/500-550+ Rate V/Springs on the street.... which leads to stuff NOT staying 'stable' throughout the rpm range and damages parts ?

And on another Note....
even Flat Tappet Hydraulics with relatively LOW V/Spring pressures/slow ramp speeds can be made to run 'stable' at surprisingly high rpm's ?
One need look no further than "Marine" applications.... where we run extremely long seat to seat durations, sometimes approaching 280-290* with very low @ .050" durations of barely 200* and low-low "Lift" to maintain good Air/Fuel Velocity(remix) across the seat ?
That's "HOW" Marine stuff has at least some grunt to get outa the hole and still be able to carry 5,000+ rpm down the lake @ WOT(albeit diddly for peaks in between)

Again.... do whatever YOU feel is correct for your Engine ?
All I'm saying is what I have learned based in my experience..... and I will use as an example the fact that when I Machine/Build a 91 Octane friendly/pump gas 920 hp 572 HEMI/KB Blocks/Stage V Heads STREET Engines...  
I digress to 220-230# Seat/550 rate V/Springs.... but at only .641"/.617" Lift..... long duration.... with VERY STRICT Thermal Stabilization procedures for the V/Springs the owners MUST follow so as to preserve the Valve Springs by NOT rev'ing them COLD and therein V/Train stability on the street even within very limited mileages.
Only wimps wear Bowties !

INTMD8

All good info  :2thumbs:   920 on 91 is bad ass.  I opted for less exhaust lift on my heap as well.

I always wait for proper oil temp before any real rpm.   Does not seem to be a common sense.  I cringe every time a customer picks up a car and goes from ice cold to a multiple gear rev limiter burnout within seconds of being started.  (explanation to not do so met with "well it's my car I'll drive it how I want").  Go right ahead but there will be consequences  :lol:
69 Charger. 438ci Gen2 hemi. Flex fuel. Holley HP efi. 595rwhp 475rwtq

c00nhunterjoe

My old crane grind is 225/678. It is definitely a race cam. It is street driven but most people tell me im crazy anyway. 286@ 050, 324 adv, .750 lift. Doesnt clean up til 4000, shift at 7, traps about 7400 at 130 mph. I let it warm up, and i dont let it idle for long periods of time. My block is bushed and i run spray bars in the valve covers.

https://youtu.be/EmFknw4UmDY
https://youtu.be/wsQhqrPZg4c

Challenger340

Quote from: c00nhunterjoe on December 04, 2020, 08:33:15 PM
My old crane grind is 225/678. It is definitely a race cam. It is street driven but most people tell me im crazy anyway. 286@ 050, 324 adv, .750 lift. Doesnt clean up til 4000, shift at 7, traps about 7400 at 130 mph. I let it warm up, and i dont let it idle for long periods of time. My block is bushed and i run spray bars in the valve covers.

https://youtu.be/EmFknw4UmDY
https://youtu.be/wsQhqrPZg4c


:2thumbs:
But YOU can do that !

The difference being WHO is running the stuff.... and YOU KNOW wtf and HOW to run that stuff  ? Attention to "details" is all important... You KNOW about your stuff and can take care of it !

the problem comes in....
when dumbass hillbilly's with NO CLUE what they are doing....only HEAR about a guy running a .750" Race Roller "no problems" ?   so they try it ?
The gonna "set the record" type fella's ?
disaster....
they literally speaking.... dunno how to even START their soon to be JUNK ?
Only wimps wear Bowties !

c00nhunterjoe

All true. I was merely saying it can be done reliably. But you dont put it together like a typical street mill. The spray bar oiling and jesel rockers is key to mine living on the street along with the bushed lifter bores and oil hole placement to keep those rollers lubed. Even so, i dont let the rpm stay at idle too long just to keep the oil moving. Its still hard on parts. I will probably change valve springs end of next year regardless of function just because.

Challenger340

Quote from: c00nhunterjoe on December 05, 2020, 05:12:06 PM
All true. I was merely saying it can be done reliably. But you dont put it together like a typical street mill. The spray bar oiling and jesel rockers is key to mine living on the street along with the bushed lifter bores and oil hole placement to keep those rollers lubed. Even so, i dont let the rpm stay at idle too long just to keep the oil moving. Its still hard on parts. I will probably change valve springs end of next year regardless of function just because.

Good point.... the often overlooked part of making Roller V/Springs living on the Street.... is good flow of Lifeblood cooling Oil running over the V/Springs,
which...
then leads into other 'debates' I won't get into here around Bronze Vrs Melonized Dizzy gears/High Vrs Std Volume Oil Pumps.... and a whole host of other things to be considered/factored into the RACE Roller Cam/V-Springs on the Street build ?

Again.... people listen, but sometimes only 'hear' what they WANT to hear based in their limited knowledge ?
Only wimps wear Bowties !

c00nhunterjoe

Fwiw, i run a brass gear, std volume pump with a low pressure spring. She only holds 10-15 psi at idle, 60 at rpm. Again, not the norm, but i was looking for hp and thus why i dont let it idle for long periods.

Challenger340

Quote from: c00nhunterjoe on December 06, 2020, 12:52:52 AM
Fwiw, i run a brass gear, std volume pump with a low pressure spring. She only holds 10-15 psi at idle, 60 at rpm. Again, not the norm, but i was looking for hp and thus why i dont let it idle for long periods.
And THAT is the best way NOT to overload/wear out the Bronze gear prematurely on the Street ! and PLENTY of Oil Pressure @ rpm !

You'd be amazed how many initially relate "melonized" Oil Pump Drive Gear as the answer..... then promptly load up with an HV Oil Pump, 20W50 Oil with .0015" Main and Rod Clrc....
and then call the Cam and melonized gears a DEFECTIVE POS when BOTH fail !

Sry for the rant.... but it's getting really BAD out there these days ?
I wish I'd recorded some of the calls I get here at the Shop.... take the time playing 20 questions trying to help out.... only to find out later that my 1st or 2 nd assumption was correct 15 minutes earlier ? they just didn't wanna admit it ?
Only wimps wear Bowties !

c00nhunterjoe

Not much surprises me anymore. I get it all day everyday too.