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Old 04-04-2009, 01:47 AM
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Jac Mac Jac Mac is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Gore. New Zealand., SI
Cobra Make, Engine: DIY Coupe, F/T ,MkIV.
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I must be bored as well, Im afraid I go with the 'long as possible' rod club as well. Mainly from three totally different applications that convinced me
1. Was involved with a 'budget' race class down here with Ford/Holden inline six cyls--
Holden 202ci, 3.625 bore x 3.25 stroke-5.250" rod (1.61/1 Rod Ratio) single barrel carb, no porting polishing, 3angle valve seats, regulated cam profile/grind, headers & compression free.
Ford 200ci, 3.68 bore x 3.13 stroke-6.250 rod (2.03/1 rod Ratio) Same cam & other rules as Holden, & Ford had intake cast in head-lovely.

Holden idled rough/lumpy-Ford was so smooth you would swear it was a sunday church car- slightly down on power to Holden-- Cure... same lobe profile, but open up lobe centers by 4°-- parity between makes restored!!

2. 351w in marathon type Jet Boat-- cam grind profile that provided excellent results from 350 chev (5.7 rod--3.5" stroke). In the Windsor 351 (6.025 rod--3.5" stroke--*** Aussie 302c rod ) Now with that cam EGT's were very high & did not respond to jet & timing changes, yet plug colours etc were fine. Did same trick & had another cam ground on wider Lobe centers, EGT's dropped by around 200° , & picked up 400RPM in the process.

3. 351w block fitted with 400c Crank & 6.580" 400c rods & a very special set of pistons. SVO C3 heads. Man did this thing do the numbers. The owner/driver still reckons to this day that it made more power than later Nascar 355 combos he has used ( Dynoed in USA at over 800hp ). Other 392/427 combos seem to run out of breath around 6000/6500--that 'Thing' for want of a better name simply kept on pulling--you gotta be doing something right when the wheelspin starts again on the 3rd/4th shift @ around 140mph with 15" wide slicks.

To put it simply, since a longer rod increases the pistons dwell time at TDC/BDC increased duration or wider lobe center is needed to take advantage of piston movement when it does start to happen. Now for any given lobe center there is a limit to how much duration you can stand before you need to open the LC angle up, yet from the examples above its obvious that the short rod motor wont appreciate this as much as the long rod version.
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