Note to myself and thinking outloud
Image below are the flow numbers on my gen 3's ported heads.
0.596'' lift puts me around 307 CFM, with 2.6hp (V10) per CFM that translates to roughly 798 bhp potential, minus 15% loss on the drivetrain we're looking at 678 hp at the wheels.
Now, with different rockers ratio, I'd be able to hope for a maximum of about 312 CFM, which can potentially deliver 811 bhp / 689 whp.
That's potential only. Which means no bottleneck: injectors/fuel pump able to supply enough fuel, air intake able to supply enough air, exhaust system not restrictive.
Also, would have to bump up the rockers ratio on the exhaust even more, going from the actual 0.554'' to something close to 0.600'' (assuming the valve will clear the piston) and get exh. 243 CFM at max lift. and most certainly rework the exhaust system at the same time, to make sure it flows out good...
Since I have a dual profile cam (246/256 @ 0.050'') with a full 10 degrees more on the exhaust side, it sure helps making it up for the lack of flow, but I probably won't ever be able to get 100% intake/exhaust, no matter how good everything are around the heads...
So what's left?
Ethanol = to boost up that 2.6 hp per CFM ratio, chemically. At some point I won't be able to supply more air, but I can supply more fuel easily with my 69# injectors (and possible fuel pump upgrade). Will it work? I don't know, but sure will test it!
Scavenging = Getting the full benefits of the camshaft and spinning the motor as it was planned: hopefully with peak power between 6,500 and 6,800 rpm or so. Now that I know I have the valvetrain to support it, I just need to adress the air flow restrictions and see what happens.
The basic maths are very well explained here:
https://youtu.be/4SeKKXEGk3w?t=2128
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Of course, there is much more to it, that 0.26 hp per cylinder per CFM is not absolute. It's a rule of thumb.
Scavenging effect (big cam) and ethanol are two ways to cheat that rule on a N/A engine. I've heard of 1000 whp N/A monsters with ''only'' 400 CFM heads (V8!)
I'm now understanding why 24 degrees valve overlap cam was about the limit for a ''street'' Viper. It loses so much cylinder pressure at low RPM, it's just impossible to compensate with a tune. Idle is fine, but it's sluggish up to roughly 2,000 rpm... So either you have a high (or very high) compression ratio and 4.10 gears to, somehow, compensate... Or you forget the ''streetable'' altogether and just use it on the strip or on the track where low-RPM is not a problem anymore. Personnally I can't (won't) do it, because I'd like to daily drive the beast in summer... That being said, it's probably possible to bump to 25-26 deg overlap if you have 11.5 or 12:1 CR, but not sure at all it's worth it. Especially if the air flow is a bottleneck. Eh, look at me: I'm stucked with a camshaft and a valvetrain, at the moment, good for 6,700-ish... but the air flow limits me to 6,000 or so. Hopefully it won't be the heads or exhaust, but only the TB and manifold.
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