- Joined
- Aug 30, 2002
- Messages
- 1,533
- Location
- Colorado Springs, CO USA
- Corvette
- 84 Z51 auto R.I.P. 89 black roadster SOLD
Mine is sure a loooooong story getting to where it is now...which is currently the engine being pretty much scattered all over the garage! :L What started out as hunting down a vacuum leak and fixing a front main oil leak has evolved into a full cam and head swap. I am going from a hydraulic flat Crane 2050 cam (454/480, .050 specs: dur 216/228, LSA 112, no overlap) and stock ported 76cc heads to a hydraulic roller Edelbrock 2204 (539/548, .050 specs: dur 234/238, LSA 112, 12 deg overlap) and a set of 70cc Edelbrock Performer heads with Crane roller rockers. This is the exact same cam/head combination Edelbrock uses on their EFI crate engine. This will be in combination with the "siamesed" intake manifold that I have been running for a couple of years now.
Just got the cam degreed in last night...and boy did I learn NOT to trust those timing marks! Edelbrock recommends installing the cam with 5 degrees of advance (as most do), with two different crank gears installed "straight up" I measured only 1 degree of advance. I am using the Summit timing chain/gear set...which has three keyways for 0 degrees, 4 degrees advanced, and 4 degrees retarded. With the new set that I got for the hydraulic roller cam (it uses a different cam gear than the flat cam) the crank gear in the +4 position measured 8 degrees of advance instead of the expected 5! There's quality control for ya! I put the old crank gear back on (no difference in the crank gears), same 1 degree of advance when installed "straight up", but the +4 position measures the expected 5 degrees of advance. So now I have to decide on whether to just use the old gear (maybe 20K miles on it) or pitch a ***** with Summit to send me one that is cut correctly (that could be a really long and frustrating process).
Also checked valve-piston clearance last night after getting to the desired cam timing...better than .020" on both valves. No problems there!
Can't wait to see what this thing runs like (after some tuning of course)!
Bill
Just got the cam degreed in last night...and boy did I learn NOT to trust those timing marks! Edelbrock recommends installing the cam with 5 degrees of advance (as most do), with two different crank gears installed "straight up" I measured only 1 degree of advance. I am using the Summit timing chain/gear set...which has three keyways for 0 degrees, 4 degrees advanced, and 4 degrees retarded. With the new set that I got for the hydraulic roller cam (it uses a different cam gear than the flat cam) the crank gear in the +4 position measured 8 degrees of advance instead of the expected 5! There's quality control for ya! I put the old crank gear back on (no difference in the crank gears), same 1 degree of advance when installed "straight up", but the +4 position measures the expected 5 degrees of advance. So now I have to decide on whether to just use the old gear (maybe 20K miles on it) or pitch a ***** with Summit to send me one that is cut correctly (that could be a really long and frustrating process).
Also checked valve-piston clearance last night after getting to the desired cam timing...better than .020" on both valves. No problems there!
Can't wait to see what this thing runs like (after some tuning of course)!
Bill