Originally Posted by
Coheed While I'm at it, More VE camshaft overlap:
SR20VET - 13*
SR20VE - 48*
SR20VE 20V - 57*
SR16VE - 70*
SR16VE - N1 (v1?) - 78*
VS the honda cams
b18* - 17*
B18C5 - 28*
Notice something here? The honda cams have more lift, but less duration and overlap than the VE cams. What do you guys think? The VE cams are bigger all around and would prob have better flow. But the ramp angle on the honda is a lot higher and would need stiffer springs? The VE has a ton more duration than the honda stuff. How much does the lift really help? apparently a lot.
You are trying to compare cam specs that are not measured the same. Those honda cam measurements are at 1mm lift for valve events. the Nissan Cam duration measurements are not at 1mm lift. I think they are at .016" lift or somewhere around there. If you were to actually install and degree the cams you would see that the Honda Type R cams are much larger than the VET cams. the sr16 and N1's are similar though. Actually the N1 exhaust is larger than any of the Type R cams in lift and duration....
The sr16ve cams and N1 cams do work well with larger turbo setups. 2 people have run sr16ve cams in boost setups both making over 500whp at 9000+ rpm on low boost.
the best way to find which cams work the best is on the dyno. Honestly I do not like the .63 turbine housing for higher power motors. Its too restrictive unless you have a larger turbine wheel like a 35R or a stg 5 T3 wheel atleast.
run the motor with the cam gears straight up on the dyno and adjust accordingly as you go. most sr20's will make more power by advancing the exhaust cam to yes eliminate valve over lap and also allow the exhaust gasses to escape earlier so there is less positive pressure in the cylinder when the intake valve opens. adjusting the intake cam will shift the power band as well but usually it depends a lot on the size of turbo being ran....