You know that you have it set up on the exhaust lobe now, right?
Good catch!You know that you have it set up on the exhaust lobe now, right?
Good grief. No, I didn't know I am the wrong lifter. Thanks for the correction. "I assumed..." and you know the rest of the line.You know that you have it set up on the exhaust lobe now, right?
You posted the second try video instead of the third try video.Third attempt to degree the cam. This time I am on the intake lifter. Thanks drag-200.
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And they would all be wrong! I don't have skills here yet. I can turn a crank. That's about it.Don't bother with the exhaust, you can't adjust it. Unless your worried about if the cam was made correctly or your own satisfaction. Now if you had a Barra that would be different
Beware of bragging about your new skills, you will end up degreeing the new cams in your local area![]()
Ah! So it's simpler than I am making it: just subtract my reading of 106.5 from the stated cam card Lobe Separation 108, not the CenterLine 104. I just needed to pay closer attention to what you wrote. Thank you.The cam is at zero offset or neutral or straight up when the lobe center is at 108.
If the lobe center is actually at 106.5 then it is 1.5 degrees advanced from the 108 neutral position.
Yes. The intake valve closes later allowing better cylinder fill at higher rpm.You wrote:
It is a good place to be.
The power band is shifted upward slightly but more important, the engine is less prone to detonation than if you advance it more.
Thanks for confirming this point. "Power band" means that at 106.5 degrees we are going to "advance" the combustion stroke moment, yes? This then takes on a bit of an aggressive approach. This is how I picture it. But I not sure I am using the proper terminology.