A
Anonymous
Guest
xctasy wrote: "The key here is that when owners of cars change camshft timing and the ammount of lift at the valve, they do it by getting an aftermarket camshaft, which incorporates about 100 years of developement."
xctasy, when you install a racing camshaft into your car and comes the moment to drive the car into city traffic, the fact that "it incorporates 100 years of development" isn't enough to make your life easy.
Think now that if the EXACT valve lift profile your "racing" engine uses is "copied" to the VVA cylinerd head (i.e. with the gas pedal pressed 95% the intake and exhaust valves of your engine with the VVA system move exactly as the valves in your "racing" car), there is no reason to take less power or less torque or worse economy than the original "racing" car. When the gass pedal is compressed at 100% then the valve lift is a little higher as well as the overlap, so the VVA engine could provide a little more power and torque than your "racing". On the other hand, when the gas pedal is only slightly pressed, the valve lift profile is anything but "wild" or "racing", making the driving into city traffic easy.
So, think once more what you can gain with a VVA and what you loose.
jamyers,
a carburator cannot control correctly the quality of the mixture in a VVA application, especially when the throttle valve is open and the speed of the air is slow or very slow (idling). The easy and cheap way is the fuel injection with lambda sensor (for feedback and adjustmnet) at exhaust.
Thanks
Manolis Pattakos
, the
xctasy, when you install a racing camshaft into your car and comes the moment to drive the car into city traffic, the fact that "it incorporates 100 years of development" isn't enough to make your life easy.
Think now that if the EXACT valve lift profile your "racing" engine uses is "copied" to the VVA cylinerd head (i.e. with the gas pedal pressed 95% the intake and exhaust valves of your engine with the VVA system move exactly as the valves in your "racing" car), there is no reason to take less power or less torque or worse economy than the original "racing" car. When the gass pedal is compressed at 100% then the valve lift is a little higher as well as the overlap, so the VVA engine could provide a little more power and torque than your "racing". On the other hand, when the gas pedal is only slightly pressed, the valve lift profile is anything but "wild" or "racing", making the driving into city traffic easy.
So, think once more what you can gain with a VVA and what you loose.
jamyers,
a carburator cannot control correctly the quality of the mixture in a VVA application, especially when the throttle valve is open and the speed of the air is slow or very slow (idling). The easy and cheap way is the fuel injection with lambda sensor (for feedback and adjustmnet) at exhaust.
Thanks
Manolis Pattakos
, the