Yeah I never had much luck at Maple Grove when the track was that cold. Generally it got bad after the 1/8th so you may be ok.
It’s 1/8 only, instant green - typical no prep stuff. I watched the vids from last year - the starting line was kinda sticky.Yeah I never had much luck at Maple Grove when the track was that cold. Generally it got bad after the 1/8th so you may be ok.
I agree. I don't pretend to understand camshafts anymore. When I was working at the engine shop I did a lot of N/A motors and you had a general idea of what the engine needed. But we still went to either Ultradyne or Bullet for a final cam recommendation. Cam numbers can look the same on paper, but without ALL the numbers they can be completely different. One take away I got from working in a race shop was that Short blocks are kind of interchangeable. Camshafts and intake manifolds are specific to the engine. What may gain 30 hp on 1 engine may gain nothing on another and HP gains are directly correlated to how bad the engine was to start with.Turbo cams are not large as compared to nitrous or NA cams Shawn.
And I’m not as cam naive as I used to be. There is a lot more to a cam than duration at .050” , LSA and ICL numbers. Something to remember with a turbo is the the intake valve doesn’t want to close, especially as the rpm (valve speed) increases. Your setup isn’t pushing on the valve to keep it open.
There is a lot of thought into turbo lobe design. And when the exhaust valve opens there is additional pressure beyond what the piston’s upwards motion create to evacuate the cylinder. And consider what is happening during overlap - NA setups relying a lot on cylinder head flow to ‘blow down’ the cylinder where as a turbo is actually pressuring the chamber during overlap to flush the burnt air out of the cylinder.
This ^^^ is a fabulous statement - I LOVE it.I agree. What may gain 30 hp on 1 engine may gain nothing on another and HP gains are directly correlated to how bad the engine was to start with.
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