Nice explanation Jay on the unique nature of the Cammer.
I'm still amazed, even with light valves, big ramps, etc. that at only 110 lbs. closed/330 open, the engine would turn 7,500 rpm! Amazing considering it was a near "90 day wonder" as a replacement head design to the existing straight valve FE 427 block. What a replacement!
quote author=jayb link=topic=5679.msg61453#msg61453 date=1519750613]
One of the things that tends to muddie the waters when talking about SOHC valve spring pressure is that the original factory valves were really, really light, hollow stem and less than 100 grams each. The factory spring pressure was about 110 on the seat and 300 over the nose, and with the big ramps on the factory cams the engines would go to 7500+ RPM with that package. When I was running the Manley custom valves that I used as SOHC replacements, the intake weighed almost 150 grams, and the exhaust was about 145 if I recall correctly. With an aggressive lobe from Comp I needed 240 on the seat and 600 over the nose to get to 7000 RPM; it needed more to go higher. Bill has some of the spintron data on the testing he did for me, which is pretty impressive actually.
Ferrea makes a lighter weight valve, around 120 grams if I recall correctly, and they won't need as much spring pressure to go to 7500 RPM, something like 175 on the seat and 450 over the nose. But those valves flow poorly compared to the Manleys, and cost a bunch of horsepower in a max effort application.
I think the springs Leny needs will depend on the cam profile, the weight of the valves, and how much boost he wants to run. Leny, can you give us that information?
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