Originally Posted by BenFenner
Has he run that design in an engine yet? I'm starting to see some issues he might run into. To extend the duration, he extends one part of the cam profile. It makes most sense to extend the highest lift section of the cam profile for a couple reasons, but even when you do it the best way (at max lift) you still are totally changing valve spring dynamics and resonance. Valve springs need to be tuned to the cam profile and 5th (or up to 9th?) order harmonics need to be taken into account especially as rpm rise. Changing the cam profile like that seems like there would be hard problems to solve with valve float. Especially when it looks like you're just adding a flat section to the cam profile, not a nice curved slope.
But I guess just about every other variable duration (and/or lift) cam profile has to deal with the same issue (except desmodromic actuation), so maybe not as big a deal as I'm making it out to be.
Has he run that design in an engine yet? I'm starting to see some issues he might run into. To extend the duration, he extends one part of the cam profile. It makes most sense to extend the highest lift section of the cam profile for a couple reasons, but even when you do it the best way (at max lift) you still are totally changing valve spring dynamics and resonance. Valve springs need to be tuned to the cam profile and 5th (or up to 9th?) order harmonics need to be taken into account especially as rpm rise. Changing the cam profile like that seems like there would be hard problems to solve with valve float. Especially when it looks like you're just adding a flat section to the cam profile, not a nice curved slope.
But I guess just about every other variable duration (and/or lift) cam profile has to deal with the same issue (except desmodromic actuation), so maybe not as big a deal as I'm making it out to be.
Well his method uses the original ramp angle to open and close the valve. That's the great part about it. What it effectively does is add meat to the cam at it's maximum lift. I don't think it affects the valve spring because it's not altering the ramp angles at all. All it does is instead of holding the valve open at max lift for a few degrees (as a standard cam would), it now "holds" it at max lift for a significantly longer period of time. With the lobe specifically designed for the engine it's being applied to, this means you won't have a power curve which peaks and then falls off, but instead you get the maximum performance that the engine can deliver at every rpm. The only constraint seems to be the ability of the other engine components to hold this power and function up to the rpm you want to rev to.
From what I gather he has run the cam in a suzuki 250 bike engine. IIRC he gained something like 40% power with lower fuel consumption. But I just scanned through the site as I'm busy prepping for exams right now.