Originally Posted by Dudeman258
Wrong.
Lift and duration will have no affect on compression. It is the closing of the intake* valve that will. Think, how can a cylinder fill at 8000rpm when it cannot fill at 400rpm? The only affect on CR will be when the valve closes. Any good cam will close slightly after bdc to utilize inertial affects of the intake velocity which will result in packing of the cyl. At cranking rpms this will effectively lower you CR. This is why you see lower peak cylinder pressure at cranking rpms with an aftermarket cam. At any rate, the pressure levels look fine, no need to fret.
Walker
Originally Posted by ashtonsser
you will notice a drop in compression with cams period. The lift/duration/overlap all have an effect. Same reason why your vac is always lower with s4's compared to stock. Stock cams its common to see 20-22 in-hg of vac wheras with s4's you will see anywhere between 16-18 in-hg of vac. There is obviously less of a vac that would get cylinder pressure up.
you will notice a drop in compression with cams period. The lift/duration/overlap all have an effect. Same reason why your vac is always lower with s4's compared to stock. Stock cams its common to see 20-22 in-hg of vac wheras with s4's you will see anywhere between 16-18 in-hg of vac. There is obviously less of a vac that would get cylinder pressure up.
Wrong.
Lift and duration will have no affect on compression. It is the closing of the intake* valve that will. Think, how can a cylinder fill at 8000rpm when it cannot fill at 400rpm? The only affect on CR will be when the valve closes. Any good cam will close slightly after bdc to utilize inertial affects of the intake velocity which will result in packing of the cyl. At cranking rpms this will effectively lower you CR. This is why you see lower peak cylinder pressure at cranking rpms with an aftermarket cam. At any rate, the pressure levels look fine, no need to fret.
Walker
I know this is a few months old, but misinformation needs to be pointed out.
this is partially correct, so it is in fact, wrong as well. the most basic explanation is cam overlap. it takes into account the intake and exhaust closing points, as well as duration. the intake closing point is the only factor if and only if the exhaust stays closed during the compression stroke. the tighter the LSA, and the more duration, the longer both valves will be open at the same time, hence affecting dynamic compression and compression tests.