Can you identify big valve head without removal?
25 posts
• Page 1 of 2 • 1, 2
No easy way to tell if a big valve conversion for the valves themselves, without pulling the head to measure. But the valve sizing was the least important part of the big valve specification
The cam, the carbs, the exhaust and the electric fan contributed more to the HP gain than the valves! and all of those can be easily checked
cheers
Rohan
The cam, the carbs, the exhaust and the electric fan contributed more to the HP gain than the valves! and all of those can be easily checked
cheers
Rohan
-
rgh0 - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 8415
- Joined: 22 Sep 2003
Johnfm wrote:So, previous owner told me the car had a big valve conversion
They could have replaced the original head with a big valve head, or they could have machined your head to Big Valve Specs by shaving .040" off & putting bigger intake valves in.
Measure the thickness... BV should be 4.60" thick I seem to remember... all others 4.64"
The Sprint Cams have two rings around them, but you will have to loosen the timing chain & remove the sprocket to check that.
Phil Harrison
1972 Elan Sprint 0260K
1972 Elan Sprint 0260K
-
pharriso - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 3186
- Joined: 15 Sep 2010
Hi,
A simple way to get a clue is using just a pair of vernier calipers, cheap digital are adequate. Measure the cam lift, make a measurement of the smaller diameter, reset zero, then measure the larger or peak of the cam lobe. The reading will be the cam lift, obviously it won?t give any timing info but will give you a guide to type of cam. Lots of Twin cam cam?s on Net but from memory standard cam 0.350 inch, Sprint or CPL2 0.360, L1 0.410.
For what it?s worth Ron.
A simple way to get a clue is using just a pair of vernier calipers, cheap digital are adequate. Measure the cam lift, make a measurement of the smaller diameter, reset zero, then measure the larger or peak of the cam lobe. The reading will be the cam lift, obviously it won?t give any timing info but will give you a guide to type of cam. Lots of Twin cam cam?s on Net but from memory standard cam 0.350 inch, Sprint or CPL2 0.360, L1 0.410.
For what it?s worth Ron.
- Craven
- Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1624
- Joined: 14 Sep 2013
Johnfm wrote:Good idea.
Need a dial gauge and magnetic base too now...
That will provide you with a load of fun on an aluminium cyl.-head
Cheers
Beware of the Illuminati
Editor: On Sunday morning, February 8th 2015, Derek "John" Pelly AKA GrumpyBodger passed away genuinely peacefully at Weston Hospicecare, Weston Super Mare. He will be missed.
Editor: On Sunday morning, February 8th 2015, Derek "John" Pelly AKA GrumpyBodger passed away genuinely peacefully at Weston Hospicecare, Weston Super Mare. He will be missed.
-
GrUmPyBoDgEr - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 2346
- Joined: 29 Oct 2004
Ron
No,he's also after setting the timing accurately...
John
You'll have to get a small piece of steel to stand the magnetic base on on the head...
John
No,he's also after setting the timing accurately...
John
You'll have to get a small piece of steel to stand the magnetic base on on the head...
John
-
john.p.clegg - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 4533
- Joined: 21 Sep 2003
If the previous owner was only referring to the valves you won't know unless the cylinder head is off. Using the Sprint valves in place of the standard valves is common. The so called big valves are only .030" larger but they do have a much better head shape for improved flow and with a little throat porting the gain is pretty good for little effort. As others have pointed out the real Sprint conversion would be a cam change/head skim or different pistons to gain the increase in compression ratio. We do it with the pistons here to save the cylinder heads and have much better pistons with a contemporary ring design. So measure the head thickness and cams to see what was really done and don't worry about the valves for now. Jetting of the carbs should have been changed if the compression and cams were done.
- Jeff@Jae
- Second Gear
- Posts: 196
- Joined: 29 Sep 2003
I just had my compression measured prior to valve adjustment at 155 150 154 150. Federal Stromberg head; not sure valves & cam. Guys, does this give me a CR of (155 + 14.7) /14.7 = 11.5? Is my CR low to expectations as certainly lower than John's numbers? When we did the build I believe the head was skimmed a bit for cleanup and 40 over pistons installed. Dave Bean recommended & supplied a thicker head gasket to avoid detonation problems. Car runs well on premium, but will ping like crazy on regular. Noticably better on 94 octane Super Premium than 92 octane Premium, using standard NA Pump octane rating (MON + RON) / 2.
Anyway, picking up on John's numbers, is there an 'expected' or 'right' CR or compression test range? You can probably tell I only have expertise at writing engine building cheques.
Stu
Anyway, picking up on John's numbers, is there an 'expected' or 'right' CR or compression test range? You can probably tell I only have expertise at writing engine building cheques.
Stu
Stu
1969 Plus 2 Federal LHD
1969 Plus 2 Federal LHD
-
stugilmour - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1944
- Joined: 03 Sep 2007
25 posts
• Page 1 of 2 • 1, 2
Total Online:
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 10 guests