Deck clearance
#1: New block, stock pin height, deck block .012" putting piston .012-.013 in the hole, .027" head gasket
#2: Used block, stock pin height, clean up deck to .003" in the hole, .039" gasket
If I build another new motor with a new block, I'd order custom pistons with the pin raised, graze the decks, and use an .039-.040 gasket. However, I wouldn't do this on a combo that didn't have much pin height to begin with though (like a 347 Ford). Lots of ways to skin the cat.
I sure get a kick out of you.........can you say "fountain of misinformation"?
Personally I doubt theres any NA production block street drivers on here that run circles around Alans NA production build.
Last edited by Vortecpro; Dec 14, 2017 at 10:24 AM.
Here is a Dodge Hemi head. It does not have a hemispherical chamber, it is a bathtub, one of the most efficient chambers because it has quench areas on both side of the chamber.
I've done a lot of work with bathtub chambers. They always make more power with tighter quench or squish as some of us call it. In race engines I would tighten the squish until the piston and heads would just start to get leave traces of touching each other and then back off a couple thousandths. Set a lot of records with tight squish.
Mike
Last edited by v2racing; Dec 14, 2017 at 01:21 PM.
The Best of Corvette for Corvette Enthusiasts
I ran naturally aspirated nitromethane in my Top Fuel Harley. I had bathtub chambers with a 30 degree squish. I ran the squish very tight. Because of this and other things I did to make my engine more efficient, I was able to run less percentage of nitro and less ignition timing. I had no problems with detonation and had very few engine failures, unlike a some of the other fast guys. I also usually ran much higher miles per hour than my competition.
The Billet Top Fuel heads I designed in 1994 are still in use today. They have been on record setting machines and won 5 national championships at IHRA in a row with two differents teams when the Harley's were at IHRA. Doug Vancil ran 6.26 @ 225 about 18 years ago with these heads. These heads had a bathtub chamber with a 30 degree squish and a domed piston to match.
My current Top Fuel heads also are bathtubbed. We ran them at Bonneville in the streamliner and the engine was a beast. We ran 222 MPH in first gear at part throttle testing, but unfortunately, my partner Leo Hess crashed and got hurt on a later pass. A couple of guys are building new bikes with them on them, but haven't made it to the track yet.
Mike
PS: A photo of the chamber. This is for a 5" bore. The valves are 2.500" and 1.980".
Last edited by v2racing; Dec 14, 2017 at 02:51 PM.
Mike
definition: The piston to head clearance distance of the top portion of the piston and the cylinder head flat surface. Including the head gaskets compressed thickness, bore, known has head gasket volume.
In other words the chamber is not included. Picture a piston at TDC. Now picture a piece of plexiglass set on top of the head gasket (no cyl head). Now picture a hole in the plexiglass for adding fluid to measure CCs. The fluid fills the bore to the first piston ring and on up to where the head gasket is. Measure that fluid volume. Thats Quench!
definition: The piston to head clearance distance of the top portion of the piston and the cylinder head flat surface. Including the head gaskets compressed thickness, bore, known has head gasket volume.
In other words the chamber is not included. Picture a piston at TDC. Now picture a piece of plexiglass set on top of the head gasket (no cyl head). Now picture a hole in the plexiglass for adding fluid to measure CCs. The fluid fills the bore to the first piston ring and on up to where the head gasket is. Measure that fluid volume. Thats Quench!
Well yes and no. The quench area can be at an angle on both the head and the piston. I used anywhere between 10 and 35 degrees. 30 degrees always seemed to produce best power. The valves have less shrouding at 30 degrees and the charge is aimed more towards the center of the combustion chamber, so it only make sense.
The volume from the top ring to the deck of the piston is not part of the quench area. You measure it to get accurate compression ratios, but it is basically lost volume, the less of it the better. Of course then you get into top ringland strength.
Mike
Mike
Last edited by v2racing; Dec 14, 2017 at 06:07 PM.
Tighter the quench, the more efficient and less detonation prone it will be....(to a degree mind you.)..
Zero decking the block, a tight quench is the best for power/efficiency. (assuming you have enough piston to valve clearance and the pistons aren't hitting the head....(at least not too much..:
You can't listen to anything NevertooOld posts...He has no clue about anything. He actually believes headers do nothing....lol
Zero decking the block, a tight quench is the best for power/efficiency. (assuming you have enough piston to valve clearance and the pistons aren't hitting the head....(at least not too much..:
You can't listen to anything NevertooOld posts...He has no clue about anything. He actually believes headers do nothing....lol
You always have to measure piston to valve clearance. This really has more to do with the camshaft you are running(valve events), then zero decking the block. Basically, you have to check EVERYTHING. A 20cc dome is not THAT tall, and with depending on the cam, I doubt you'll have P to V problems.
There is a LOT more science to engine building then just ordering parts from a catalog and slapping it together. Lots of critical machine work, blue printing and dialing in to make it all work. You are really at the mercy of your local machine shop/builder if you are doing it yourself.
For all of the costs incurred when you really get into doing a real build (like you are now, not just a refreshen of a stock motor), I always recommend people to go to VortecPro performance for BBCs.... You simply can not build one that makes that kind of power, with that kind of quality and proven performance, for that cheap.
Talk to your machine shop, get some ball park pricing on machine work, assembly, then tally up your parts list etc... You will be in for a surprise when all the details add up...













