Originally Posted by
yoshoto thanks for that reply.
it is piston to head clearance I am looking at, trying to find ways to increase knock resistance.
what headgaskets comercially available are 1.0 mm? the stock ones are 1.2mm correct?
Can you expand on the concept of the "highly spec'd" motor because if I have to go there I will.
Does nissan menion in an FSM a minimum clearance or indirectly a maximum the head can be decked? or minimum distance from crank bore to block surface that kind of thing?
You can deck the head as much as you want and the piston to head clearance will not change. Its when you start to really deck the block that it changes because as you deck the block the piston comes out of the hole. Nissan specify's that the piston be atleast .1mm in the hole i believe ( dont quote me on that 100% though).
If you run flat top pistons with valve reliefs that is your best bet. I believe what Ted is talking about in a "specd out motor" is that you have gone through and set all your clearances and tolorences in the motor and you know what is happening. The easiest way to roughly measure piston to head clearance is to put the piston at true TDC and then rock the piston in its bore all the way to one side then measure how far above the block the highest part of the piston is protruding. If you have domed pistons do not measure the dome part, just the part of the piston that will be covering the quench area. On stock Cast pistons with std piston to wall clearance of .0008" the piston will not even come out of the block above the deck. The more piston to wall clearance, the more the piston will rock and protrude. As the engine warms up and the piston expands, the piston will setttle more "squared up" in the bore.
Another option for decreasing quench area for knock resistance is quench welding and shaping. I now do combustion chamber welding and reshape the quench pads and add a lot of material to the combustion chamber and allows for a much faster burn rate as much more of the A/F mixture will be centered towards the spark plug. In addition to that, when done right you can gain a considerable amount of low lift flow on both the intake and exhaust. On the last K20 head that I did, we got about 15-25cfm increase from .050" lift to .250" lift just from welding and shaping. This helps guide the airflow around the valves. On the exhaust side of that head, it now flows more than the intake up to about .200".
On a stock head, this will remove about 4-5cc of chamber volume. On a stock motor with stock pistons, this can raise the compresion ratio by over 1pt but it will now have better knock resistance than before.
PM me if you are interested in prices. I can post pictures later if you wish of the head i'm currently working on.