Absolutely!
The equity equation Flow = Volume times Area (Q=v.a) formula should create a target gas speed of about 250 feet per second at peak power, but the chamber design may allow for 300 feet per second, and still gain power. The are a raft of other items to then consider
I could go on about the vast raft of other factors.
The best method of flow assesment is a kind of "Simpsons rule" a measurement of area under the intake and exhast cfm curves. (Mathmaticians use it for integrating an iregular curve to find the area) The degree of valve overlap or lift is not as important as the bulk mass of flow inducted at each intake cylce. The intake valves need to be wide open when peak cylinder speed is reached. The old saying is that that all valves are half open twice ans many times as they are fully open, and peak cfm figures are not the means of creating a wide torque curve.
Balancing the exhast flow to 80 to 65% of the intke flow is a key point, and that can be done via a cam, rather than port mods.
Shape and cross sectional area are important, runner volume is important.
When drag racing, though, the peak power rules. On the streets, the brake specific fuel consumption drops when the focus is on increasing the the port sizes. Air flow drops, fuel falls out of suspension, and we are loosing mixture motion.
Each has a part to play.
Lastly, the key acid test of finding out if you've hit pay dirt on airflow management is calculating a Aspiration Factor, which is a Brake Mean Effective presure calculation.
Or the
composite number which is proportinal to brake mean effective pressure and volumetric efficiency.
The latest Dick Johnston Racing HP320 Kw 5.4 Quad Cam V8 has arrived in Australia. It has the highest BMEP of any production engine ever.
320 kW is 429 hp, and the 5.4 is 330 cubes with maximum power at only 5300 rpm. The factor is a stagering
4077! Thats
89.8 in metrics, or a BMEP of
11.1 via a metric constant used by some European engineers.
The EFI AVESCO 302 engine, basically a Windsor V8 with NASCAR heads, runs 630 hp at 7500 rpm, or
3595.
The 850 hp at 1800 rpm F1 183 cube engines loose BMEP because of the huge airflow restriction. That's only
3875
The carb NASCAR 351 engine runs 650 hp at 8000 rpm, or
4320.
A Lamborghini LP 400 S had 375 hp at 8000 rpm, or
5120.
The 400 hp Chev Z06 only rates at
5190, or
114.3 in metrics,
8.7 via the Euro BMEP system.
In terms of hp per per per cube, the Ford modular V8 is 25% more efficient in terms of airflow management. The Chevy Z06 engine then fights back on thermal efficency, as its a much more economical engine, with better mecahnical efficiency for every hp produced. After all, it only has one cam to spin, a better igntion system, and is two-thrids the weight at about 185 kilograms verses about 290 kg for the Triton based 5.4 with Mustang 4.6 Quad Cam heads.