well you can measure the vertical distance from the lowest point of the valve to the flat face of the block. I did it with dental plaster and a piece of glass, if you do it that way you need to put some plasticene in the spark plug hole.
Then you know that the valve is at 15 degrees ( close enough, the design number for the head is 29 degrees between the valve stem angles), so take the sine of the 15 and divide the vertical distance by sin(15), that gives you the actual lift before collision, with an allowance of the head gasket for valve wobble etc.
If you look carefully at an sr16 piston you will see that the fly cut goes down quite a bit below the deck height, and people have found limits on cam gear usage with C2/3 cams.
Mike
Then you know that the valve is at 15 degrees ( close enough, the design number for the head is 29 degrees between the valve stem angles), so take the sine of the 15 and divide the vertical distance by sin(15), that gives you the actual lift before collision, with an allowance of the head gasket for valve wobble etc.
If you look carefully at an sr16 piston you will see that the fly cut goes down quite a bit below the deck height, and people have found limits on cam gear usage with C2/3 cams.
Mike