Both Holdner (UA-cam) & Brule (Engine Masters show) did a similar test, one on a LS, the other on a 440. The tests used same lobe profiles and duration, but different LSA. Interesting dyno results. Keep up the good work, Eric! This is fun stuff!
Richard Holdner also promotes procomp/speedmaster junk, so I lost all respect for him. His cam test went crazy as hell. He should have went with normal shit people actually use, 106, 108, 110 and 12 or 114. He went crazy wide with around 4° between each cam. I think he ended up with a 128 or 120 lsa as his wisest on a SBC. That's retarded
@inscoredbz bet you can't take me out and I got some of those procomps on my Windsor. But those procomps can look and perform very well with someone who's knows heads
I know that we built a 1030 hp 433, ls based, 9800 rpm and we used around a 118 lsa and some engines we used tight lsa. It's all dependent on everything else lol. We had a 400 sbf with 114 and 116 on the end lobes. But, I've personally had my hands on 6 engine masters engines that won and placed in top 5, all of them. Camshaft and people talkin about them is comical sometimes. Keep on building and racin!
I ran a 236/248 111+3 in a 380” ls3 years ago. It had my ported 243 heads and 13.7:1 compression, worked victor jr. this was 2015 or so not as many options back then. 665hp on engine dyno and 540whp in my 2600# fb rx7. It was a great cam setup and street drove great on e85! I put thousands of miles on that setup and the t was incredibly fast. The ls3 heads are an odd duck when it comes to cams, you basically have a great BBC rec port on the intake side and a SBC exhaust port. On stock heads you will always see a large split due to the essentially having 2 different style of ports
Thank you for the information. Even this old guy learned something new today. I always thought the same way. Tighter lobe separation meant more horsepower.
I am pretty sure you are onto the LSA and comp. ratio. problem. I have been specing cams for my own builds for years and use Vizard s formula for up to 11-1 for every point over increase LSA by 1 degree also for every step up in valve size increase your LSA 1 degree. Richard Holldiner did a test on a junkyard LS and for every cam with a tighter LSA it made more low down torque and more HP than the previous. Keep up the videos Eric they are all good.
I love this. Thanks for the data eric. IDK what LS people were saying to get the intake and duration split to be minimized but theyre clearly wrong lmao. Ive always seen a lot more duration on the exhaust than intake for N/A stuff.
Testing is the science behind it, I look forward to seeing the lower compression with the 108! I think speculation is based on people’s guess and lack of evidence. You go Eric always enjoy your work!
I dabble in engines but one of my passions is reloading pistol ammunition for shooting Cowboy action. That statement about testing and knowing is important. But even testing and knowing will still make you wrong on the internet. I've almost stopped posting, far too many theoretical experts out there. And as you also indicated, the best LSA and split are tied with the compression ratio as well. Any racing organization that lowered CR to limit HP quickly found out that the good teams could tune around that limitation and gain most of the lost HP back in. Back in the day I was hired to help on a late model dirt racer, with a 030 over 400 SBC, to do the engine work. Yes, I was working way above my pay grade. Therefore I went back about 5 years and went with the combinations that were proven winners five years back. IOW, I selected a combo where I could go to just about anyone and get tuning tips. Winning was what happens, not dominating, but if the driver had a good day, he had enough car to get it done. Thanks for posting the video.
@@MasterWitchDoctor All the LS guys think burnouts and donuts mean fast. Most of the cars on UA-cam don’t show time slips, and we don’t race dynos. And there is always someone faster. Still not sure why no one spins their LS engines past 7k when my flat tapped hydraulic cam sees 7400, And sustained 6500 rpm operation. Think if I ran some Erics promaxx or dragon slayer with shaft rockers. While you can have your opinion, I’m not basing my builds and wants off what others think. Plenty of really powerful high rpm gen 1 small blocks out there. The LS does not have the monopoly on horsepower. And these videos have proved you don’t get the magic big hp with just a cam change, cause the stock heads flow decent but not enough to make the amazing hp fiction even one believes, you have to have the aftermarket heads to make the big numbers. And this dyno engine has a 4.00 stroke. No stock production, LS other than the 7.0 427 LS has a 4.00 stroke.
@@MasterWitchDoctor I like 87 Irocs but the 305 was not really what I would call fast. Past few years circle track engines have gone this way with the 305. They said it was for cost and a saved many race series with these engines. Production wise, the 305 was a bandaid for emissions. When in reality they could have kept the 350 and done much better. Even the 302 ford engines of the day were making the same hp as the tpi corvette 350. That’s really embarrassing for gm. And why would gm even put the 305 or the 4.3 in obs trucks that weigh in at 4200 plus pounds. At least the aftermarket was there to save us. And once Dart and World came along in the late 80’s with better cast iron heads it got better. Be glad we have so many choices of good cylinder heads today. In the 80’s we had nothing. Good thing we figured how to port the factory heads of the day.
13:1 Compression and heads and intake that flow very good numbers require less overlap (wider lobe sep) More overlap will help in a lower flowing intake port to scavenge more flow into the cylinder by the exhaust charge exiting. That gives you increased cylinder pressure.
Eric, great test and info. It still comes down to combo, as you know, but I can't believe all of the people in the comments. I would not want one touching my sbc or bbc, and I'm old school SBC and BBC to the end.
Compression ratio has a big influence on LSA, I would imagine the higher the CR the wider you'd typically want to go with LSA, as a general rule of thumb. With a 10.5:1 the tighter angle may have been more appropriate. Still a great test that shows some interesting things.
In my opinion it seems like lower compression 9-11:1 like the tighter lsa and 11:1 and higher do better with a wider lsa... Can't wait to see what happens with the next set of heads
@EricWeingartner- ❤ your testing. We all have our best bench dyno thoughts, in our heads😉 I really enjoy actual data. Im really looking forward to seeing the test difference, with lower compression. I have always thought that 8 to 9 to 1 comp., regular/average type "street" engines, that use 87, or 89 octane, would benefit the most from tighter LSA's. I also think that "Any" engine, that responds well to a lot of timing= is not very eff., would benefit more from a tighter LSA. Since LS engines are typically very eff.= most run well with low timing, i feel they don't respond well to tighter LSA's. I also feel if a engine is limited in RPM capability, it may favor tighter LSA, especially if it responds well to high timing. Your thoughts would be very much appreciated. Im a former drag racer, that had a 9 to 1 comp., solid roller cammed 406 cu. In engine, cam was Comp 300 AR= street roller series ( 255° @ .050, .575 Lift 110° LSA +4°adv. ), in a "91" S-10(race wt. 3400Lbs. Im very Big, & it had a heavy ford 9" rear end w/3.50 gears), 28" drag D.O.Ts, it had average, unported, Iron Eagle 200cc cast iron heads, Edlebrock Rpm Air-Gap intake, 750 holley Dp, w/notched floats & jet extensions, blocked off power valve(buddy talked me into doing this= great throttle response, but sucked for cruising! Had 80 jets front & rear), 1" 5/8 shorty headman headers= way to small, w/manual exh. Blockoffs, w/3" dual exh., with 2 chamber flows( they dont flow but they sounded mean ), & about a 100 shot of Nitrous. 11.50s @ 115 Mph, on engine & 10s in the 120s w/the little Nitrous wiff! Im disabled now, & have not been outside in Almost 5 years now, so youtube videos help make my life much more enjoyable, so thank you sooo much, Eric. I Really Appreciate you. Thank you, for taking Your valuable time, to make these videos💖
Richard Holder did a LSA test on Chevy LS with 108/112/120 LSA. The 108 made more peak and average torque and even more peak HP. It's on youtube somewhere.
@@dennisrobinson8008 another interesting point, they used the same intake and exhaust lobe, so it was a pretty apples to apples comparison. I'm just a keyboard warrior, but the comparison should be much closer the more I think about it.
@@dennisrobinson8008 same here, I remember too when I first saw that. We have good information here, but it's honestly not discrediting vizards formula, not yet anyway. We would have to see a cam with same intake and exhaust lobe as Texas speed on a 108 lsa.
He did another test with AFR 245s on a 408 and it didnt make any more hp and less tq with a 246 vs a 240 deg int cam, so, I believe this cam is too big and is beyond the point of diminishing returns making 680hp on a 408 which is a lot for a 408 over 100hp/L, that article is called Stroker LS Cam Swaps: When is Bigger Not Better?
Too much intake Duration is why the 108 split loses power under the curve. Great test though. Would love to see a cam with similiar duration on the intake but the same 108 lsa.
There are a lot of factors that determine camshaft selection, the higher the compression the wider the LSA, more low lift flow and higher port energy the wider the LSA and there is much more!!!
Don’t mean to get off topic. But I was watching a video of David Wolf and he made 630hp and 625 ft lbs of torque with a 7.3 Godzilla for under $5,000. BTR camshaft, forged rods and pistons, aftermarket intake, and Ls7 lifters. He paid $1500.00 for the engine core. I know they’re hard to find because of being such a new engine. It would be awesome to see what you could do with one of these Ford engines.
A closer result than I was expecting. The difference in duration may have been mitigated to some degree - from an IVC perspective - by the difference in LSA. In other words the IVC figures are closer than what you'd expect from a first-glance look at the duration figures. I love what you're doing here; one good test is worth a million internet opinions.
IMO it's about valve events, LSA is a just by product. Your two can examples have drastic changes on intake duration. Just that alone added a good amount of overlap. Add to it the tighter LSA increased overlap even more. I wish you and others would specify valve events rather than duration and LSA when you do back to back cam comparisons in the same engine.
The Comp Cam had less cylinder pressure due to having over double the overlap. So the tighter LSA didn’t work as typically seen in testing. TS cam = IVC- 43.5, Overlap-12.5 Since we don’t know the intake centerline, I’m guessing the cam is advanced 2 degrees on the Comp Cam. Comp cam- IVC- 47, Overlap- 28 The LSA on the Comp (108) should be about right if the duration is matched to maintain the same cylinder pressure. 235/239 @ .050 on a 108 LSA, 106 ICL, 43.5 IVC, 21 degrees of overlap. This should lose nothing at the bottom and gain at the top.
Exactly without calculating the dynamic compression ratio and valve overlap the test is not informative by just slapping parts in an engine and running it.
I think the tight LSA cam is beyond the point of diminishing returns for intake duration, Richard Holdner did a teat with a 240 and a 246 deg intake duration cam, the bigger cam lost tq and made no more Hp. It's called Stroker LS Cam Swaps: When is Bigger Not Better? The test engine was a 408 with AFR 245cc heads so it has just about the best as cast cathedral port heads available and it didnt benefit with more than 240° int duration.
Yes the LS don’t need as much cam as guys think cause they flow better. I would like to see the data down to 2500 RPM’s. Coming off a street light it would be interesting to see. SBC and LS are different animals as you show. Nice😊and better for power brakes vacuum.
IMO those heads are SO GOOD that on a 4" bore basically anything thats not 420+cuin that even an small cam is able to meet the airflow demands. So adding more cam is no different than adding more head, it simply doesnt need it! Sure it will make a few more hp but making BIG gains isnt going to happen
I don't completely agree yet, because until a "big" high lift cam is tested, we won't know what it's truly capable of. I'd like to see something in the .670" - .690" lift 112-115 LSA .256/.272 @ .050 on the 13:1 setup to REALLY max em out. I feel like the slightly bigger dur cam would've done better on a wider LSA but it didn’t have enough lift if it did to go 715ish HP
this 408 with those ProMaxx heads is probably not benefitting because the intake duration is too big, here is a test Richard Holdner did with a 408 with 245cc AFRs that made no extra hp and less tq with a 246° int duration than it did with 240° int duration its called Stroker LS Cam Swaps: When is Bigger Not Better?
Richard Holdener did a LSA vid with a LS. He ordered 4 cams from BT. Lift and duration exactley the same all run in the same motor. He only recieved 3 of them from BT and without exception the engine picked up HP & Torque through most of the whole sweep.The only variable was the LSA. There sees to be some variables at times you don`t concider or don`t recognize but for the most part most and I say most of my engines that I do dyno support the tighter LSA thinking. Good Video none the less. Any Info is good Info
@@ezmny1387 My dirt motors were 14.75 on a 106LSA with conciderable more duration and turn right at 8000rpm, as I said we engine builders may not recognize or concider all variables. In fact all my compression motors are at 106, ICL 102 or 3. None were LS motors that might be a varible I was talking about.
A wasted 2c, but I will pay. I will point to the intake closing being some +10° later for the 108lsa vrs the 112, thats assuming the 108 was not advanced? If the 108 was put at +4-6° (intake centerline of 102-104), then low rpm might come back. The reasoning is that this would put the intake valve closing event closer to the 112 helping restore torque in the lower rpm. However, I doubt that will fix the top end. To fix that, more head cfm is needed. 680 hp is around the "calculated" 340cfm requirements. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
You makin me wanna start puttin up vids on my channel again! Im a cylinder head guy as well, also engine builder, but i love cylinder heads and cams. I could talk with anyone on these subjects. But you are correct everyone is a cam expert, lol
I agree with everything Eric says here. Compression ratio definately can have a huge influence on LSA. Overlap flow and blowdown changes from engine to engine. Some may very well prefer 108 or even tighter. Back in the eighties. Tight lobe sep was more common. But also were less dyno cells less testing and a greater percentage of poor flowing heads. The head architecture, geometry, valve job profile, valve position, compression ratio, lobe profile, carb size on and on and on all afect lobe seperation. Every engine is different.
One thing I noticed is that the 112 camshaft has 12.5 degrees of overlap and the 108 camshaft has 28.5 degrees of overlap. I'd be curious to see how the engine would respond to a tighter 108 LSA with the same amount of overlap. So, the .050" duration numbers would be 221/236. This would at least keep the dynamic compression a constant in the test.
The dynamic compression could be increased by sciencing out the ICL and advancing it to the point where it adds as much cylinder pressure as possible while still being able to pull to the necessary rpms for the best peak HP.
I think alot of the tight LSA guys are coming from the DV camp. The duration and I to E ratio theories are what was pounded into us from the magazine days imo. From the testing you've done and what has been done on LSs, they seem to need less timing from an efficiency standpoint.
I had my cam reground and installed because I was curious about this from DV cam chart.I went from a 110 to a 107 in my 406 sbc.same lift and duration just changed the lobe.I did notice a little bit of a difference down low.Little more ufh.
486 average HP will walk away from the 431 cam all day. Most manufacturers lean towards a wider LSA to avoid “Low manifold vacuum”. BTR has used the tighter LSA in the smaller cams with success. NA Race applications like the tighter LSA cams. Application specific LSA depending on where in the RPM range you want to optimize power.
These LS engines sure do have some funny quirks . It seems each different style head brings its own set of rules too . Its hard to understand just why they hit a certain power level and Bam a brick wall is there ?? Especially NA ?? So much power comes so easy that this is truly baffleing !!! Ive run a big inch mouse for years and i just dont get it . I dont think the LS has truly been unlocked yet . This sure is a head scratcher !!
Still waiting for the someone on youtube to make a video comparing cams that all have the same over lap but different lsa/duration. (108lsa 224/228 and 112lsa 232/236) Both cams have 10° overlap at .050. I would love to see a test like this please
Talking with Herb Gebler many years ago (RIP), he would always talk about signal. A tight lobe separation angle would give better signal (better scavaging) assuming everything else was tuned. Gebler was a header guy (for the likes of Warren Johnson) and all about tuning headers.
Interesting stuff. Always love good data. Always wonder about the combo too. Changing more than one variable is always sketchy but...The TS cam looks to be peaking about where'd I'd expect based on past experience, but the Comp wasn't really any higher. Normally on LS stuff with a duration that big on the intake the power peak will move up the rev range, unless you're sticking with a stock/stock like intake mani, then the peak just hangs on forever, but doesn't really climb. Never did a Victor on the LS though so don't know where that thing does its best work. Keep posting!!
I believe chamber and port position effect desired lobe seperation more. Low port sbc will need to be cammed differently then a high port LS at a 15 or less angle.
Cool video. The only problem I see is with a 13:1 compression ratio you need a bigger LSA. That's why the 112 LSA dis so much better. It made its power through the trapping efficiency. In a higher compression big block. Like this 114 or 115 LSA is where you would want to be. I know this is an LS motor but power is power. And torque is torque. The bigger LSA under high compression confirms my favorite camshaft Guru's statements and builds. Love it great video.
Maybe that mystery cam needed to be more in the 238 intake and 246 exhaust neighborhood, .620/.620 lift 107 or 109 lsa maybe it got to the point where more intake duration wasnt helping and didnt have enough exhaust duration and lift and maybe it needed to go a degree up or down on LSA. Maybe the Summit Single Plane would be better 240/252 .569/.569 106 then maybe run it with 1.8 rockers to get .604/.604 lift or 1.85 to get .620/.620 lift. That is crazy impressive power from a 408 680hp is serious, that Super Victor is impressing me, those ProMaxx heads too. Here I was thinking that a basic bish 600hp if I was lucky 408 was stroker might not be worth my time, I was thinking about trying a 7.3 Godzilla or GenV L8T bored to 4.125" with a 4.125" stroke 441ci build to get 650-700hp. Super impressive test engine no doubt. You ever know what you are going to happen until you test the engine like you say. When it's a custom combination you never know exactly what can happen there can be idiosyncracies and something that people think will work might not.
I always thought a decent split on the exhaust duration helps the engine to carry out farther. (more gradual fall off past peak HP.) As an afterthought, when most of the big LS cam suppliers have wide separation angles and big exhaust splits, it's reasonable to assume they've done testing and their final grinds produce favorable results. I had a customer bring in a bone stock 2006 6.0 out of a truck, cam was something like 23x on the intake, and with the rocker fulcrum kit, a set of springs, and a carb/Victor Jr single plane the engine belted out 475 HP. I'm sure the engine had 100K original miles, and it belted out impressive numbers (to me) for minimal investment.
perhaps a better way to compare LSA effects is to have custom cams ground with the EXACT same lobe just at different angles. I know on all MY SBC and BBC engines I always get better results with tighter LSA's than similar cams with wider LSA's.
Yes, absolutely, I think that this cam had more duration than would be beneficial. Look at this test done by Richard Holdner with a 408 with AFR 245cc heads, 246 deg int made less tq and no more hp than a 240 deg cam, its called Stroker LS Cam Swaps: When is Bigger Not Better?
So funny reading the comments and so many people believed they would have predicted the results. Next time Eric, do a summary video with the all the information before testing, and see most the predictions be wrong in the comments. I'll be honest, I would have predicted wrong. If it was an EFI with factory style intake manifold, I would have chosen the Texas speed camshaft, but being carburetor, I would have predicted the comp cam to be the winner. Goes to show, every combo is different.
I like it. Anymore though, I think there is such a large aftermarket for LS motors, one cam/head combo is going to do something completely different than the other.
All the most powerful LS engines I see tested always have a 10-15 degree intake to exhaust split and the LSA is always around 112-114..........just seems to be what those engines want....they don't respond well to cams that would normally work well for gen 1 small blocks or even Ford Windsor engines.....
Depends alot if the engine has Cathedral or Rec port heads. Cathedrial ports will perform well with tighter a duration split and LSA than rec ports that are bandaiding the huge difference in flow Int vs Ex.
Hey Eric, Tim here, yea, i tire of i-net warriors.....who REALLY dont know crap.......i think u said it best, when you said...."well did u watch him race??....oh, it was SO fast, u didnt even see him"......yep.....i was VERY surprised at the cam swap outcome......i wudda thunk the tighter LSA, and less spread wudda netted more.......each motor is its own dude......12° of seperation in common in an LS....i'm a Pontiac guy, i need a 6-8 spread, and like a 108-110 LSA for my shi% to perform, but each engine has its own thing.....i think ur MASSIVE testing proves certain i-net "GOTTA BE's" false/garbage, unless you've dyno'd it urself......i enjoyed my brother, and KEEP TESTING PLEASE!!!..i'm a gear head nerd.....i will trust ur testing, and #'s, b4 i wud blab, and say i-net garbage, as to what to do, again, EACH ENGINE is its own animal.......you are KICKIN BUTT!!!!...i am VERY proud i sub'd so long ago........PROVE IT THRU TESTING!!!....like Vizard preaches!!!...yep, enjoyed, TY sir, PEACE to you!!
Ls engines deffintly seem to love 1 7/8" headers as aposed to 1 3/4". Doesn't hurt them down low either from my experience. Would be interested to see a back to back in your setting compared to chassis dyno/hub dyno. I'd be inclined to say you will see a big gain from 1 7/8 and possibly a different result with 1 7/8. Just what I've found. Love your work and videos.
It still boils down to the combination you have whether or not this or that cam will optimize more power! This is why you can customize your camshaft and Taylor it to your combination!! Trial and error my friend!!
I Was Bummed When I Saw The 108 Cam With A 243 Intake Duration lmao. That Things Got Ridiculous Overlap Too. I Thought The Power Would Shift Near 7K But I Think That Intake Duration Is Past The Point Of "Demimishing Returns." On That Engine. I Would Have Tried A 229/229 108 So It Had Similar Overlap As The 112 And Then Maybe A 229/246 108 So It Would Have Alot More Overlap To See If It Would Make More Peak Power Around Similar RPM As The 112. Id Like To Disqualify Myself As Knowing What Im Talking About Tho. Ive Only Test 2 Camshafts Personally And It Was On My V6 Turbo 3800. I Had A "Turbo" 230/224 117 Camshaft Then I Did A Crap Ton Of Personal Research With Tons Of Yourube Videos, Dyno Graphs etc I Made The Determination Of 210/212 110 (orginally wanted a 108 with slightly tweak durations but comp cams wont grind you anything tighter than 110). Anyway It Didnt Feel Any Faster Or Slower Up Around 6000 But God Damn When It Grabs The Next Gear It Felt Like It Was Freighttraining. I Basically Put The Power Where I Use It. Next Im Gonna Try 9.9 CR On That Camshaft Shaft Which Is What The "On Paper" LSA Should Be For My Combo. I Had 8.0 CR An On Paper The 108 Was The Target. Its A Daily Driver So Im Excited To Test Out The 9.9 Compression. I Try And Make The Best And Test Different Things When My Engine Has To Come Apart LMAO.
If I was to guess, I would have thought the bigger cam would have traded more torque for a little more top end, makes me wonder if that intake is holding it back now, I haven’t seen many high rpm carbed ls setups, but with those heads, a cam that size would be in the 7500 rpm range with a holley high ram or low ram, with wayyyy less torque, wish I could afford to send you a holley setup with a carb adaptor
That is so interesting it just I can't believe the LS likes such a different camshaft even though yeah it has a hydraulic roller instead of solid. But anyways cool test I just wish there some kind of explanation on why LS want a different LSA and duration split and whatever. I also remember I think you said in 1 of your videos because LS have such huge cross sections could be why but who knows. But the 1 thing I always said to people and be like you can do this for 100 years and still always learn something new
Several observations, hopefully no parroting. That said it’s info from dyno results published by other folks. First, the BTR Truck Norris cam is tiny. The only way you’d want that in a 408 is for towing (obviously my opinion). The Texas Speed stage 2 is probably intended for a 6.2 (376 cu in), not so much a 408. It does very well, though. Holdener’s many tests show that LSes like big splits between intake and exhaust duration. The two “big” Comp cams Richard often uses, one cathedral and one rectangular port, have the same intake duration at 0.050, but the rec port one has more exhaust duration. Comparing the two cams on the same combo, usually a 6.2 but sometimes a 6.0, the rec port cam loses a bit at rpm below the torque peak and gains a bit above. As I recall all these variations are single digits. When Richard put the big Comp cam in a 5.3 with good heads and intake, he got a power peak at 7700. I would think the right cam would peak higher than 6600 or so in yours. Another “well understood rule” (parroting?) is that higher compression generally likes wider LSAs. My two cents would be none of the cams tested so far are really optimized for your 408. In spite of that, you’re doing the testing and that’s the only way to get real answers. Thanks, Eric.
I wonder how the different lobe shapes of the cam changes things. A test with two different duration/split but the same lobe shape would be interesting.
Back before keyboard ninjas when we took someone out at the track or on a deserted back road we would joke that they built a "Hot Rod" magazine engine. 😅😅 and thats why we kicked their tail. Back then it was gospel, according to HR that 9.0-1 compression was all you could run with pump gas and 108 LSA was gospel. Guess my 11-1 CR 355 ci with 112 LSA shouldnt have been my cousins number one side income the summer of 1981. The more things change the more they remain the same. Keep up that testing.
It would be interesting, to fill out a couple a spec sheets and order 2 or 3 cams from people who do spec (chris padget at bullet, mike jones at jones cam) cams and see which one works the best.
I’m no expert honestly.. but I’ve always seen a split make more power.. my Experience seems like in a good engine combination… according to cubic inches and compression ratio the duration @50 is where the magic is.. I had an old 355 with 58 cc heads and a 248/254 @50 hydraulic they said it wouldn’t be streetable but it was in a Silverado with 355 gear and it had some 140s 60’ and I drove it about every day..
Thanks Eric, great video as always. Oh I heard if you put the cam in backwards and coat it with cheez whiz it makes crazy torque numbers. It’s on redit it must be true.
Opinion: A couple flaws in the 108 cam. 1) the higher compression ratio needs a wider LSA. 2) The greater flow of the LS head needs a wider LSA. 3) The longer exhaust duration may help the the engine lengthen the over rev time which may improve the average power output.
I think you are wrong, I think the intake duration is beyond the point of diminishing returns. Look at this test Righard Holdner did with a 240 and a 246 cam in a 408 with AFR 245s, the smaller heads made more tq and the same hp. Its called Stroker LS Cam Swaps: When is Bigger Not Better?
You have to test to know, when the 502 crate engine came out two bracket racer guys used it in similar cars one guy used a strip dominator one guy used a dart intake they traded intakes and both cars lost a tenth
@@WeingartnerRacingI do not understand them beyond the general stuff, but I'm fascinated with it, you would think the bigger cam would've pulled away as rpm rose. Thank you for testing all this and showing us the results
Higher compression = wider LSA. Lower compression, restricted flow benefits more from the tighter LSA. Your real world testing proves this out. Looking forward to the next test.
Been enjoying your shows Eric. Now. Can you try those type cam grinds in ford Windsor form, where the heads have strong response. Yes, to me I can hear something lazzy with the gm flow activity from start to finish. Those guys might have a point about ratios. Mike.
Great video as always!!!!! Have you ever flowed the GMPP LS3 cnc heads? I searched you're videos but didn't see them. Just wondering because I have a set on a 6.0 with a magnuson supercharger. Thanks!!
The correct way to use flow between In and Ex, is you look at the intake flow at peak flow demand and then the Exhaust flow at BDC. That is the ratio that you design the camshaft around. Not peak lift flow. 70% at these points is what you look for.
@@krusher74a 408 with 2.080 intake with 13:1 cr according to David Vizard 108 lsa is spot on!! This cam had so much more intake duration. According to DV the comp cam should have done so much better.
Both Holdner (UA-cam) & Brule (Engine Masters show) did a similar test, one on a LS, the other on a 440. The tests used same lobe profiles and duration, but different LSA. Interesting dyno results. Keep up the good work, Eric! This is fun stuff!
Richard Holdner also promotes procomp/speedmaster junk, so I lost all respect for him. His cam test went crazy as hell. He should have went with normal shit people actually use, 106, 108, 110 and 12 or 114. He went crazy wide with around 4° between each cam. I think he ended up with a 128 or 120 lsa as his wisest on a SBC. That's retarded
man need to get out of the arm chair do something to get credit, when you have a dyno and 10002 of results let me know
@inscoredbz bet you can't take me out and I got some of those procomps on my Windsor. But those procomps can look and perform very well with someone who's knows heads
I know that we built a 1030 hp 433, ls based, 9800 rpm and we used around a 118 lsa and some engines we used tight lsa. It's all dependent on everything else lol. We had a 400 sbf with 114 and 116 on the end lobes. But, I've personally had my hands on 6 engine masters engines that won and placed in top 5, all of them. Camshaft and people talkin about them is comical sometimes. Keep on building and racin!
@@inscoredbz all the respect to richard holdener. He has done great for the youtube engine performance testing community.
Sweet, I’ve been sticking with 112 lsa for my LS builds for about 8 years now. No surprises. Keep racing! Great video.
Good test and evaluation Eric.
This is certainly a very fair and honest comparison.
Thanks for the great Tech.
Have a great day.👍👍
I ran a 236/248 111+3 in a 380” ls3 years ago. It had my ported 243 heads and 13.7:1 compression, worked victor jr. this was 2015 or so not as many options back then. 665hp on engine dyno and 540whp in my 2600# fb rx7. It was a great cam setup and street drove great on e85! I put thousands of miles on that setup and the t was incredibly fast. The ls3 heads are an odd duck when it comes to cams, you basically have a great BBC rec port on the intake side and a SBC exhaust port. On stock heads you will always see a large split due to the essentially having 2 different style of ports
665hp is pretty serious for ported 243s. Impressive.
Wow. I was not expecting that.
I have a pair of Promaxx cnc shocker 185 heads for my 360LA. It's good to see their Chevy heads doing so well.
Thank you for the information. Even this old guy learned something new today. I always thought the same way. Tighter lobe separation meant more horsepower.
I am pretty sure you are onto the LSA and comp. ratio. problem. I have been specing cams for my own builds for years and use Vizard s formula for up to 11-1 for every point over increase LSA by 1 degree also for every step up in valve size increase your LSA 1 degree. Richard Holldiner did a test on a junkyard LS and for every cam with a tighter LSA it made more low down torque and more HP than the previous. Keep up the videos Eric they are all good.
Cylinder head flow is so good it doesnt require nearlybas much cam to get huge gains !!!!
Thanks Eric,camshaft dynamics make my head hurt .Appreciate ur hard work n sharing
I love this. Thanks for the data eric. IDK what LS people were saying to get the intake and duration split to be minimized but theyre clearly wrong lmao. Ive always seen a lot more duration on the exhaust than intake for N/A stuff.
It's not what I would have guess ed. Thanks for showing this
Testing is the science behind it, I look forward to seeing the lower compression with the 108! I think speculation is based on people’s guess and lack of evidence. You go Eric always enjoy your work!
I dabble in engines but one of my passions is reloading pistol ammunition for shooting Cowboy action. That statement about testing and knowing is important. But even testing and knowing will still make you wrong on the internet. I've almost stopped posting, far too many theoretical experts out there. And as you also indicated, the best LSA and split are tied with the compression ratio as well. Any racing organization that lowered CR to limit HP quickly found out that the good teams could tune around that limitation and gain most of the lost HP back in. Back in the day I was hired to help on a late model dirt racer, with a 030 over 400 SBC, to do the engine work. Yes, I was working way above my pay grade. Therefore I went back about 5 years and went with the combinations that were proven winners five years back. IOW, I selected a combo where I could go to just about anyone and get tuning tips. Winning was what happens, not dominating, but if the driver had a good day, he had enough car to get it done. Thanks for posting the video.
Lots of information here. But I’m still not switching from my gen 1 small block.
@@MasterWitchDoctor All the LS guys think burnouts and donuts mean fast. Most of the cars on UA-cam don’t show time slips, and we don’t race dynos.
And there is always someone faster.
Still not sure why no one spins their LS engines past 7k when my flat tapped hydraulic cam sees 7400, And sustained 6500 rpm operation. Think if I ran some Erics promaxx or dragon slayer with shaft rockers. While you can have your opinion, I’m not basing my builds and wants off what others think. Plenty of really powerful high rpm gen 1 small blocks out there. The LS does not have the monopoly on horsepower.
And these videos have proved you don’t get the magic big hp with just a cam change, cause the stock heads flow decent but not enough to make the amazing hp fiction even one believes, you have to have the aftermarket heads to make the big numbers.
And this dyno engine has a 4.00 stroke. No stock production, LS other than the 7.0 427 LS has a 4.00 stroke.
@@MasterWitchDoctor I like 87 Irocs but the 305 was not really what I would call fast. Past few years circle track engines have gone this way with the 305. They said it was for cost and a saved many race series with these engines.
Production wise, the 305 was a bandaid for emissions. When in reality they could have kept the 350 and done much better. Even the 302 ford engines of the day were making the same hp as the tpi corvette 350. That’s really embarrassing for gm. And why would gm even put the 305 or the 4.3 in obs trucks that weigh in at 4200 plus pounds. At least the aftermarket was there to save us. And once Dart and World came along in the late 80’s with better cast iron heads it got better. Be glad we have so many choices of good cylinder heads today. In the 80’s we had nothing. Good thing we figured how to port the factory heads of the day.
The Master of all Masters is David Vizard
13:1 Compression and heads and intake that flow very good numbers require less overlap (wider lobe sep) More overlap will help in a lower flowing intake port to scavenge more flow into the cylinder by the exhaust charge exiting. That gives you increased cylinder pressure.
Great channel!!! Ok you HOOKED me!!! FINALLY, a No b/s channel, refreshing, with Intelligence, keep en’ coming!!
Thanks for putting out this info. I'm glad I waited till the end to comment. You cleared up questions that came to my head during the vid.
Eric, great test and info. It still comes down to combo, as you know, but I can't believe all of the people in the comments. I would not want one touching my sbc or bbc, and I'm old school SBC and BBC to the end.
Pretty much most of the Ls cams I've seen seem to be 112, 113,114 and 115 LSA. Great info brother.
I'm lov'n this testing work. Keep the good stuff coming !!
That was great hope you do more of this stuff
Compression ratio has a big influence on LSA, I would imagine the higher the CR the wider you'd typically want to go with LSA, as a general rule of thumb. With a 10.5:1 the tighter angle may have been more appropriate. Still a great test that shows some interesting things.
In my opinion it seems like lower compression 9-11:1 like the tighter lsa and 11:1 and higher do better with a wider lsa... Can't wait to see what happens with the next set of heads
Love some tight LSA videos great info thanks.
@EricWeingartner- ❤ your testing. We all have our best bench dyno thoughts, in our heads😉 I really enjoy actual data. Im really looking forward to seeing the test difference, with lower compression. I have always thought that 8 to 9 to 1 comp., regular/average type "street" engines, that use 87, or 89 octane, would benefit the most from tighter LSA's. I also think that "Any" engine, that responds well to a lot of timing= is not very eff., would benefit more from a tighter LSA. Since LS engines are typically very eff.= most run well with low timing, i feel they don't respond well to tighter LSA's. I also feel if a engine is limited in RPM capability, it may favor tighter LSA, especially if it responds well to high timing. Your thoughts would be very much appreciated. Im a former drag racer, that had a 9 to 1 comp., solid roller cammed 406 cu. In engine, cam was Comp 300 AR= street roller series ( 255° @ .050, .575 Lift 110° LSA +4°adv. ), in a "91" S-10(race wt. 3400Lbs. Im very Big, & it had a heavy ford 9" rear end w/3.50 gears), 28" drag D.O.Ts, it had average, unported, Iron Eagle 200cc cast iron heads, Edlebrock Rpm Air-Gap intake, 750 holley Dp, w/notched floats & jet extensions, blocked off power valve(buddy talked me into doing this= great throttle response, but sucked for cruising! Had 80 jets front & rear), 1" 5/8 shorty headman headers= way to small, w/manual exh. Blockoffs, w/3" dual exh., with 2 chamber flows( they dont flow but they sounded mean ), & about a 100 shot of Nitrous. 11.50s @ 115 Mph, on engine & 10s in the 120s w/the little Nitrous wiff! Im disabled now, & have not been outside in Almost 5 years now, so youtube videos help make my life much more enjoyable, so thank you sooo much, Eric. I Really Appreciate you. Thank you, for taking Your valuable time, to make these videos💖
Richard Holder did a LSA test on Chevy LS with 108/112/120 LSA. The 108 made more peak and average torque and even more peak HP. It's on youtube somewhere.
Yes on THAT PARTICULAR ENGINE
@@dennisrobinson8008 another interesting point, they used the same intake and exhaust lobe, so it was a pretty apples to apples comparison. I'm just a keyboard warrior, but the comparison should be much closer the more I think about it.
@CK-mf6du it surprised me because the assumption would be the tighter lsa would fall off earlier. In that test it did not.
@@dennisrobinson8008 same here, I remember too when I first saw that. We have good information here, but it's honestly not discrediting vizards formula, not yet anyway. We would have to see a cam with same intake and exhaust lobe as Texas speed on a 108 lsa.
He did another test with AFR 245s on a 408 and it didnt make any more hp and less tq with a 246 vs a 240 deg int cam, so, I believe this cam is too big and is beyond the point of diminishing returns making 680hp on a 408 which is a lot for a 408 over 100hp/L, that article is called Stroker LS Cam Swaps: When is Bigger Not Better?
Too much intake Duration is why the 108 split loses power under the curve. Great test though. Would love to see a cam with similiar duration on the intake but the same 108 lsa.
Magnificent. I was here for the rant . Great factual analysis
There are a lot of factors that determine camshaft selection, the higher the compression the wider the LSA, more low lift flow and higher port energy the wider the LSA and there is much more!!!
This. There are many factors to take into account, most here are trying to oversimplify
Don’t mean to get off topic. But I was watching a video of David Wolf and he made 630hp and 625 ft lbs of torque with a 7.3 Godzilla for under $5,000. BTR camshaft, forged rods and pistons, aftermarket intake, and Ls7 lifters. He paid $1500.00 for the engine core. I know they’re hard to find because of being such a new engine. It would be awesome to see what you could do with one of these Ford engines.
A closer result than I was expecting. The difference in duration may have been mitigated to some degree - from an IVC perspective - by the difference in LSA. In other words the IVC figures are closer than what you'd expect from a first-glance look at the duration figures. I love what you're doing here; one good test is worth a million internet opinions.
IMO it's about valve events, LSA is a just by product. Your two can examples have drastic changes on intake duration. Just that alone added a good amount of overlap. Add to it the tighter LSA increased overlap even more. I wish you and others would specify valve events rather than duration and LSA when you do back to back cam comparisons in the same engine.
The Comp Cam had less cylinder pressure due to having over double the overlap. So the tighter LSA didn’t work as typically seen in testing.
TS cam = IVC- 43.5, Overlap-12.5
Since we don’t know the intake centerline, I’m guessing the cam is advanced 2 degrees on the Comp Cam.
Comp cam- IVC- 47, Overlap- 28
The LSA on the Comp (108) should be about right if the duration is matched to maintain the same cylinder pressure.
235/239 @ .050 on a 108 LSA, 106 ICL, 43.5 IVC, 21 degrees of overlap.
This should lose nothing at the bottom and gain at the top.
Exactly without calculating the dynamic compression ratio and valve overlap the test is not informative by just slapping parts in an engine and running it.
I think the tight LSA cam is beyond the point of diminishing returns for intake duration, Richard Holdner did a teat with a 240 and a 246 deg intake duration cam, the bigger cam lost tq and made no more Hp. It's called Stroker LS Cam Swaps: When is Bigger Not Better? The test engine was a 408 with AFR 245cc heads so it has just about the best as cast cathedral port heads available and it didnt benefit with more than 240° int duration.
Morning E. Love the camshaft stuff.
Yes the LS don’t need as much cam as guys think cause they flow better. I would like to see the data down to 2500 RPM’s. Coming off a street light it would be interesting to see. SBC and LS are different animals as you show. Nice😊and better for power brakes vacuum.
IMO those heads are SO GOOD that on a 4" bore basically anything thats not 420+cuin that even an small cam is able to meet the airflow demands. So adding more cam is no different than adding more head, it simply doesnt need it! Sure it will make a few more hp but making BIG gains isnt going to happen
I don't completely agree yet, because until a "big" high lift cam is tested, we won't know what it's truly capable of. I'd like to see something in the .670" - .690" lift 112-115 LSA .256/.272 @ .050 on the 13:1 setup to REALLY max em out. I feel like the slightly bigger dur cam would've done better on a wider LSA but it didn’t have enough lift if it did to go 715ish HP
this 408 with those ProMaxx heads is probably not benefitting because the intake duration is too big, here is a test Richard Holdner did with a 408 with 245cc AFRs that made no extra hp and less tq with a 246° int duration than it did with 240° int duration its called Stroker LS Cam Swaps: When is Bigger Not Better?
Real life testing hurting feelings, i love it!
Richard Holdener did a LSA vid with a LS. He ordered 4 cams from BT. Lift and duration exactley the same all run in the same motor. He only recieved 3 of them from BT and without exception the engine picked up HP & Torque through most of the whole sweep.The only variable was the LSA. There sees to be some variables at times you don`t concider or don`t recognize but for the most part most and I say most of my engines that I do dyno support the tighter LSA thinking. Good Video none the less. Any Info is good Info
This engine is 13:1 though
@@ezmny1387 My dirt motors were 14.75 on a 106LSA with conciderable more duration and turn right at 8000rpm, as I said we engine builders may not recognize or concider all variables. In fact all my compression motors are at 106, ICL 102 or 3. None were LS motors that might be a varible I was talking about.
Good testing, and i look forward to the lower compression test results.
A wasted 2c, but I will pay.
I will point to the intake closing being some +10° later for the 108lsa vrs the 112, thats assuming the 108 was not advanced? If the 108 was put at +4-6° (intake centerline of 102-104), then low rpm might come back. The reasoning is that this would put the intake valve closing event closer to the 112 helping restore torque in the lower rpm. However, I doubt that will fix the top end. To fix that, more head cfm is needed. 680 hp is around the "calculated" 340cfm requirements.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
You makin me wanna start puttin up vids on my channel again! Im a cylinder head guy as well, also engine builder, but i love cylinder heads and cams. I could talk with anyone on these subjects. But you are correct everyone is a cam expert, lol
Also, I'm gonna sub I've been seeing you a while. But what S&G machine do you have or use?
I had a Rottler’s sg7 I now have a Robbins sg8. Both are good but the robins is better.
I can’t wait to see that solid roller in it
I agree with everything Eric says here. Compression ratio definately can have a huge influence on LSA. Overlap flow and blowdown changes from engine to engine. Some may very well prefer 108 or even tighter. Back in the eighties. Tight lobe sep was more common. But also were less dyno cells less testing and a greater percentage of poor flowing heads. The head architecture, geometry, valve job profile, valve position, compression ratio, lobe profile, carb size on and on and on all afect lobe seperation. Every engine is different.
One thing I noticed is that the 112 camshaft has 12.5 degrees of overlap and the 108 camshaft has 28.5 degrees of overlap. I'd be curious to see how the engine would respond to a tighter 108 LSA with the same amount of overlap. So, the .050" duration numbers would be 221/236. This would at least keep the dynamic compression a constant in the test.
The dynamic compression could be increased by sciencing out the ICL and advancing it to the point where it adds as much cylinder pressure as possible while still being able to pull to the necessary rpms for the best peak HP.
I think alot of the tight LSA guys are coming from the DV camp.
The duration and I to E ratio theories are what was pounded into us from the magazine days imo.
From the testing you've done and what has been done on LSs, they seem to need less timing from an efficiency standpoint.
Cam Doctor both cams for the truth.
I had my cam reground and installed because I was curious about this from DV cam chart.I went from a 110 to a 107 in my 406 sbc.same lift and duration just changed the lobe.I did notice a little bit of a difference down low.Little more ufh.
486 average HP will walk away from the 431 cam all day. Most manufacturers lean towards a wider LSA to avoid “Low manifold vacuum”. BTR has used the tighter LSA in the smaller cams with success.
NA Race applications like the tighter LSA cams.
Application specific LSA depending on where in the RPM range you want to optimize power.
I was wondering why this wasn't mentioned, 50+ more average?
Because it wasn’t 50 average better. One pull started later so you are not comparing same range.
These LS engines sure do have some funny quirks . It seems each different style head brings its own set of rules too . Its hard to understand just why they hit a certain power level and Bam a brick wall is there ?? Especially NA ?? So much power comes so easy that this is truly baffleing !!! Ive run a big inch mouse for years and i just dont get it . I dont think the LS has truly been unlocked yet . This sure is a head scratcher !!
Still waiting for the someone on youtube to make a video comparing cams that all have the same over lap but different lsa/duration. (108lsa 224/228 and 112lsa 232/236) Both cams have 10° overlap at .050. I would love to see a test like this please
i think the 13:1 compression made the 112 lsa cam the right choice. if it had 10:1 , i would go with 109 lsa.
Talking with Herb Gebler many years ago (RIP), he would always talk about signal. A tight lobe separation angle would give better signal (better scavaging) assuming everything else was tuned. Gebler was a header guy (for the likes of Warren Johnson) and all about tuning headers.
Interesting stuff. Always love good data. Always wonder about the combo too. Changing more than one variable is always sketchy but...The TS cam looks to be peaking about where'd I'd expect based on past experience, but the Comp wasn't really any higher. Normally on LS stuff with a duration that big on the intake the power peak will move up the rev range, unless you're sticking with a stock/stock like intake mani, then the peak just hangs on forever, but doesn't really climb. Never did a Victor on the LS though so don't know where that thing does its best work. Keep posting!!
I believe chamber and port position effect desired lobe seperation more. Low port sbc will need to be cammed differently then a high port LS at a 15 or less angle.
I’ve always wondered why the LSA is so often the same for both on most cams, makes total sense to me.
Cool video. The only problem I see is with a 13:1 compression ratio you need a bigger LSA. That's why the 112 LSA dis so much better. It made its power through the trapping efficiency. In a higher compression big block. Like this 114 or 115 LSA is where you would want to be. I know this is an LS motor but power is power. And torque is torque. The bigger LSA under high compression confirms my favorite camshaft Guru's statements and builds. Love it great video.
Maybe that mystery cam needed to be more in the 238 intake and 246 exhaust neighborhood, .620/.620 lift 107 or 109 lsa maybe it got to the point where more intake duration wasnt helping and didnt have enough exhaust duration and lift and maybe it needed to go a degree up or down on LSA. Maybe the Summit Single Plane would be better 240/252 .569/.569 106 then maybe run it with 1.8 rockers to get .604/.604 lift or 1.85 to get .620/.620 lift. That is crazy impressive power from a 408 680hp is serious, that Super Victor is impressing me, those ProMaxx heads too. Here I was thinking that a basic bish 600hp if I was lucky 408 was stroker might not be worth my time, I was thinking about trying a 7.3 Godzilla or GenV L8T bored to 4.125" with a 4.125" stroke 441ci build to get 650-700hp. Super impressive test engine no doubt. You ever know what you are going to happen until you test the engine like you say. When it's a custom combination you never know exactly what can happen there can be idiosyncracies and something that people think will work might not.
Good information! Thanks for sharing.
LOL Eric, people are giving advice to the guy that competed in Engine Masters.😂
I always thought a decent split on the exhaust duration helps the engine to carry out farther. (more gradual fall off past peak HP.) As an afterthought, when most of the big LS cam suppliers have wide separation angles and big exhaust splits, it's reasonable to assume they've done testing and their final grinds produce favorable results. I had a customer bring in a bone stock 2006 6.0 out of a truck, cam was something like 23x on the intake, and with the rocker fulcrum kit, a set of springs, and a carb/Victor Jr single plane the engine belted out 475 HP. I'm sure the engine had 100K original miles, and it belted out impressive numbers (to me) for minimal investment.
perhaps a better way to compare LSA effects is to have custom cams ground with the EXACT same lobe just at different angles. I know on all MY SBC and BBC engines I always get better results with tighter LSA's than similar cams with wider LSA's.
Yes, absolutely, I think that this cam had more duration than would be beneficial. Look at this test done by Richard Holdner with a 408 with AFR 245cc heads, 246 deg int made less tq and no more hp than a 240 deg cam, its called Stroker LS Cam Swaps: When is Bigger Not Better?
Try both cams at 108 and 112 with the same specs and see what numbers it gives.
frieburger did this on engine masters also
Holdener also did an LSA test 108,112 and 120 and the 108 made better TQ and hp with same duration and lift ... every combo is different
With good flowing heads and bigger compression, less duration and overlap is needed, pretty evident of that here
Good video Eric
So funny reading the comments and so many people believed they would have predicted the results. Next time Eric, do a summary video with the all the information before testing, and see most the predictions be wrong in the comments. I'll be honest, I would have predicted wrong. If it was an EFI with factory style intake manifold, I would have chosen the Texas speed camshaft, but being carburetor, I would have predicted the comp cam to be the winner. Goes to show, every combo is different.
I like it. Anymore though, I think there is such a large aftermarket for LS motors, one cam/head combo is going to do something completely different than the other.
All the most powerful LS engines I see tested always have a 10-15 degree intake to exhaust split and the LSA is always around 112-114..........just seems to be what those engines want....they don't respond well to cams that would normally work well for gen 1 small blocks or even Ford Windsor engines.....
Exactly
Depends alot if the engine has Cathedral or Rec port heads. Cathedrial ports will perform well with tighter a duration split and LSA than rec ports that are bandaiding the huge difference in flow Int vs Ex.
So the cam I specd for an LS 3 that made that made 550 tire through a dog box and quick change with only an 8* split must be fake news
Hey Eric,
Tim here, yea, i tire of i-net warriors.....who REALLY dont know crap.......i think u said it best, when you said...."well did u watch him race??....oh, it was SO fast, u didnt even see him"......yep.....i was VERY surprised at the cam swap outcome......i wudda thunk the tighter LSA, and less spread wudda netted more.......each motor is its own dude......12° of seperation in common in an LS....i'm a Pontiac guy, i need a 6-8 spread, and like a 108-110 LSA for my shi% to perform, but each engine has its own thing.....i think ur MASSIVE testing proves certain i-net "GOTTA BE's" false/garbage, unless you've dyno'd it urself......i enjoyed my brother, and KEEP TESTING PLEASE!!!..i'm a gear head nerd.....i will trust ur testing, and #'s, b4 i wud blab, and say i-net garbage, as to what to do, again, EACH ENGINE is its own animal.......you are KICKIN BUTT!!!!...i am VERY proud i sub'd so long ago........PROVE IT THRU TESTING!!!....like Vizard preaches!!!...yep, enjoyed, TY sir, PEACE to you!!
Ls engines deffintly seem to love 1 7/8" headers as aposed to 1 3/4". Doesn't hurt them down low either from my experience. Would be interested to see a back to back in your setting compared to chassis dyno/hub dyno. I'd be inclined to say you will see a big gain from 1 7/8 and possibly a different result with 1 7/8. Just what I've found. Love your work and videos.
It still boils down to the combination you have whether or not this or that cam will optimize more power! This is why you can customize your camshaft and Taylor it to your combination!! Trial and error my friend!!
I Was Bummed When I Saw The 108 Cam With A 243 Intake Duration lmao. That Things Got Ridiculous Overlap Too. I Thought The Power Would Shift Near 7K But I Think That Intake Duration Is Past The Point Of "Demimishing Returns." On That Engine. I Would Have Tried A 229/229 108 So It Had Similar Overlap As The 112 And Then Maybe A 229/246 108 So It Would Have Alot More Overlap To See If It Would Make More Peak Power Around Similar RPM As The 112. Id Like To Disqualify Myself As Knowing What Im Talking About Tho. Ive Only Test 2 Camshafts Personally And It Was On My V6 Turbo 3800. I Had A "Turbo" 230/224 117 Camshaft Then I Did A Crap Ton Of Personal Research With Tons Of Yourube Videos, Dyno Graphs etc I Made The Determination Of 210/212 110 (orginally wanted a 108 with slightly tweak durations but comp cams wont grind you anything tighter than 110). Anyway It Didnt Feel Any Faster Or Slower Up Around 6000 But God Damn When It Grabs The Next Gear It Felt Like It Was Freighttraining. I Basically Put The Power Where I Use It. Next Im Gonna Try 9.9 CR On That Camshaft Shaft Which Is What The "On Paper" LSA Should Be For My Combo. I Had 8.0 CR An On Paper The 108 Was The Target. Its A Daily Driver So Im Excited To Test Out The 9.9 Compression. I Try And Make The Best And Test Different Things When My Engine Has To Come Apart LMAO.
Great experiment, keep them coming!
If I was to guess, I would have thought the bigger cam would have traded more torque for a little more top end, makes me wonder if that intake is holding it back now, I haven’t seen many high rpm carbed ls setups, but with those heads, a cam that size would be in the 7500 rpm range with a holley high ram or low ram, with wayyyy less torque, wish I could afford to send you a holley setup with a carb adaptor
That is so interesting it just I can't believe the LS likes such a different camshaft even though yeah it has a hydraulic roller instead of solid. But anyways cool test I just wish there some kind of explanation on why LS want a different LSA and duration split and whatever. I also remember I think you said in 1 of your videos because LS have such huge cross sections could be why but who knows. But the 1 thing I always said to people and be like you can do this for 100 years and still always learn something new
Several observations, hopefully no parroting. That said it’s info from dyno results published by other folks. First, the BTR Truck Norris cam is tiny. The only way you’d want that in a 408 is for towing (obviously my opinion). The Texas Speed stage 2 is probably intended for a 6.2 (376 cu in), not so much a 408. It does very well, though. Holdener’s many tests show that LSes like big splits between intake and exhaust duration. The two “big” Comp cams Richard often uses, one cathedral and one rectangular port, have the same intake duration at 0.050, but the rec port one has more exhaust duration. Comparing the two cams on the same combo, usually a 6.2 but sometimes a 6.0, the rec port cam loses a bit at rpm below the torque peak and gains a bit above. As I recall all these variations are single digits. When Richard put the big Comp cam in a 5.3 with good heads and intake, he got a power peak at 7700. I would think the right cam would peak higher than 6600 or so in yours. Another “well understood rule” (parroting?) is that higher compression generally likes wider LSAs. My two cents would be none of the cams tested so far are really optimized for your 408. In spite of that, you’re doing the testing and that’s the only way to get real answers. Thanks, Eric.
I wonder how the different lobe shapes of the cam changes things.
A test with two different duration/split but the same lobe shape would be interesting.
Great testing Eric thanks
Proving all the time how 1 test is worth 100 opinions
That promaxx seems To be an excellent head
Back before keyboard ninjas when we took someone out at the track or on a deserted back road we would joke that they built a "Hot Rod" magazine engine. 😅😅 and thats why we kicked their tail. Back then it was gospel, according to HR that 9.0-1 compression was all you could run with pump gas and 108 LSA was gospel. Guess my 11-1 CR 355 ci with 112 LSA shouldnt have been my cousins number one side income the summer of 1981. The more things change the more they remain the same. Keep up that testing.
It would be interesting, to fill out a couple a spec sheets and order 2 or 3 cams from people who do spec (chris padget at bullet, mike jones at jones cam) cams and see which one works the best.
I’m no expert honestly.. but I’ve always seen a split make more power.. my Experience seems like in a good engine combination… according to cubic inches and compression ratio the duration @50 is where the magic is.. I had an old 355 with 58 cc heads and a 248/254 @50 hydraulic they said it wouldn’t be streetable but it was in a Silverado with 355 gear and it had some 140s 60’ and I drove it about every day..
Thanks Eric, great video as always. Oh I heard if you put the cam in backwards and coat it with cheez whiz it makes crazy torque numbers. It’s on redit it must be true.
It would be fun to see what DV would come up with on his cam program, feed him some numbers
Great video. Thanks Eric !!!
Opinion: A couple flaws in the 108 cam.
1) the higher compression ratio needs a wider LSA.
2) The greater flow of the LS head needs a wider LSA.
3) The longer exhaust duration may help the the engine lengthen the over rev time which may improve the average power output.
I think you are wrong, I think the intake duration is beyond the point of diminishing returns. Look at this test Righard Holdner did with a 240 and a 246 cam in a 408 with AFR 245s, the smaller heads made more tq and the same hp. Its called Stroker LS Cam Swaps: When is Bigger Not Better?
The LS head design uses wider lsa then small block as the intake port doesn't need to be tugged on by the increased overlap timing event
Good test! How about getting Texas Speed to send you identical cams other than lobe separation angles? Is that doable?
I'm the best I've ever been. Lol
Thank you for what you do! 😊
You have to test to know, when the 502 crate engine came out two bracket racer guys used it in similar cars one guy used a strip dominator one guy used a dart intake they traded intakes and both cars lost a tenth
Id actually like to see both cams time 4 degrees earlier than top dead center and dyno again
There's more to a cam than the general specs
Yep
@@WeingartnerRacingI do not understand them beyond the general stuff, but I'm fascinated with it, you would think the bigger cam would've pulled away as rpm rose. Thank you for testing all this and showing us the results
Higher compression = wider LSA. Lower compression, restricted flow benefits more from the tighter LSA. Your real world testing proves this out. Looking forward to the next test.
Been enjoying your shows Eric. Now. Can you try those type cam grinds in ford Windsor form, where the heads have strong response. Yes, to me I can hear something lazzy with the gm flow activity from start to finish. Those guys might have a point about ratios. Mike.
So much for the keyboard jockeys out here that drive moms SUV.
Great video as always!!!!! Have you ever flowed the GMPP LS3 cnc heads? I searched you're videos but didn't see them. Just wondering because I have a set on a 6.0 with a magnuson supercharger. Thanks!!
"There's no dog in this hunt" adding that to my lexicon
Good stuff still baby cam for a 408.
The correct way to use flow between In and Ex, is you look at the intake flow at peak flow demand and then the Exhaust flow at BDC. That is the ratio that you design the camshaft around. Not peak lift flow. 70% at these points is what you look for.
I would have lost that bet 😆 great video again
Watch the david vizard LSA videos. all the infor you would ever need.
@@krusher74a 408 with 2.080 intake with 13:1 cr according to David Vizard 108 lsa is spot on!! This cam had so much more intake duration. According to DV the comp cam should have done so much better.
@@DamienFrench-f3w you have to adjust for increased compression. Probably would come up to 110.
@@brandonroseman1039 I already allowed for the increased compression ratio