I have an issue with this whole discussion prior to the shiny object of overlap and believe you need a little more closed spring pressure for a blower
- Pressure is acting on the closed valve, period, and that is pounds per square inch, normally atmospheric, but with 14 lbs of boost that's closer to 28 lbs per square inch pushing every direction, including down on the valve which is greater surface area than 1 square inch
- As the valve opens, the differential pushes the air in (same with naturally aspirated and of course a negative exhaust pulse also causes more of a depression causing even more movement)
- The charge continues to move through the valve events, if it equalized, before that, it would slow and likely drop fuel out of suspension, if nothing else it would just stop moving.
- Even if you COULD time the valve to close at exactly pressure equilibrium, move the throttle and it would no longer be there, it would only be for a specific RPM, load and exhaust harmonic
- The issue is, the valve closes before compression builds to a significant amount, and why we need a slight increase in closed pressure, once the piston comes up, it isn't needed, compression is there, but not at the beginning of the event (this IS what DCR considers as the start of the stroke, now this is not a DCR discussion, but important to understand that you need a closed valve to make compression).
- The increased closed pressure to prevent bounce, not sealing it shut during peak compression
- Now you could say that the increased cylinder pressure due to the huffer offsets it, but a valve with 3 square inches of surface area, that would be 28 *3 or 64 lbs, and pre-combustion, I would expect cylinder pressures to be lower than that when the valve initially bounces
- Now, if you already have excess closed spring pressure, OK, but IMO, the minimum closed spring pressure for a blown engine is slightly higher than the closed spring pressure for the same naturally aspirated engine
I'll duck back out, but IMHO, add some closed pressure over an equally spec'd naturally aspirated combo