|
Cylinder Heads - About
Mintec heads. |
25 May 2002 |
Terminology -
|
VFM |
Value For Money |
|
CR |
Compression Ratio |
|
VE |
Volumetric Efficiency |
'Modified to give maximum
performance gain for cost. Combustion chambers, inlet and exhaust ports extensively re-worked.
Smoothed finish in ports - not mirror-finish polished to minimise drag. Four-angle valve seats in head. Cooper S size valves with
current maximum flow profiles and Tuftrided for durability/longevity when used
with unleaded fuel (hence 'black' finish). Combustion chamber volume used to
give slight static compression ratio increase over standard. Head
mods. employed
greatly increase volumetric efficiency, boosting actual running (dynamic) compression
ratio. Where much sportier cam profiles are used, a higher compression ratio is
advised to achieve maximum power potential. Seek advice on what is required'.
That is the opening paragraph from the fitting instructions sheet as
supplied with the heads I do for Mini Spares. A very short, what's involved
report and is a pretty accurate description. After all - what else can you say
about a modified cylinder head? For some the 'visual' is the only way to go -
the shinier the better in most instances. The better a head looks, the more
power it'll give. Absolute hogwash.
Oh, I don't mean everything that glitters isn't gold; there are
one or two A-series head specialists out there that produce what are
essentially absolutely sublime works of art that deliver the goods too. But
just like art - the more desirable the higher the price. Some have knocked me
for my relatively 'plain' looking heads, saying they don't look anything
special. Some saying they bought A.N.Other's head
because it was 'better finished' (i.e. mirror-finish polished ports). Well this
ain't a fashion show guys. I've recently been asked
to 'justify' my heads by prospective purchasers. Right off the cuff my initial
reaction is 'why should I? I know they work'. But then that's just the problem
isn't it - I know, but how on earth do you folks know? Excepting
word of mouth by those that have bought and used my heads.
I have done tests in the past where I've dyno'd
an engine then tried several different aficionados 'off-the-shelf' heads on it
so see what gives. But then to name names would start the mud slinging - and I'm not into that, and it wouldn't be fair
without the other side to fight their corner. It would probably be labelled as
a 'fix' as I wasn't an independent tester. But then again - how do these other
aficionados know how their heads compare with others if they don't do this?
Perhaps the smuggest of them just think their heads just can't be bettered,
others perhaps pandering to the customers desires at that period (38mm inlet
valves, inclined heads, 'tunnel' ports, high peak airflow figures, etc.). And
who can blame them? After all - they're giving you what you want, right? Well,
I've never pandered to the public. I've always turned out what I believe to be
what's good - not guessed at but well tried and tested and from a continual
R&D program. Especially where VFM is concerned.
Like I don't get carried away mirror-polishing every nook and cranny. I've
rarely found any performance gain, it takes time and extra materials to do it
(which someone has to pay for), gets dirty the first time you fire it up, and
you can't see any of it once it's fitted to an engine. A layer of carbon is a
far better heat insulator than a mirror-polished chamber that lasts 60 seconds.
That does not constitute VFM as far as I'm concerned.
Rather than do a 'mine's better than his' type of deal - which is what I
think a number of folk would like to see - I'll just do a 'what I do and why I
do it' thing. Perhaps it'll help.
So cutting the opening paragraph down into it's
component parts, we start with 'modified to give maximum performance gain for
cost'. Exactly what I've just been banging on about.
To me, there is no point in doing something that takes time and materials that
doesn't help the cause in achieving the ultimate goal - more power but at
reasonable expense. If you're not fitting a modified head for this reason, stop
reading and buy the prettiest head you can find for whatever you have to
spend/can afford, as none of the following will make an ounce of difference to
you.
'Combustion chambers, inlet and exhaust ports extensively reworked'. And so they are, but not over the top. Over the many years
I've been modifying heads, I've distilled out what are potentially the most
important aspects to give the kind of airflow in the right places that affect
different driving disciplines. There is absolutely no point whatsoever to
providing a lusciously modified head that gives massive peak airflow figures
when that peak is at 0.500"-0.550", yet the discipline only calls for
0.400" lift. Believe me when I tell you I've flow tested LOTS of heads
from other experts where they achieve promised peak flow figures that would
leave you dead in the water with the poor figures they get up to 0.350"
lift. Not to mention the gross inconsistencies port to port. We're talking area
under the curve here - and that's what I try to achieve. For a street car, you
need a head that'll flow well in the most used range of lift for that
'discipline'. As far as potential over-all performance then -
VFM.
Smoothed finish in ports - not mirror-finish polished - to minimise
drag. Yes it does. Fuel can stick to smooth shiny surfaces, reducing fuel
efficiency and economy - particularly where overly large ports are used which
reduce gas speed within the port. On a racer that is driven flat out everywhere
perhaps this isn't such a problem. And highly polished ports will slightly
increase airflow in certain instances. So on a racer where port velocity is
being driven hard, fuel fall-out is less likely. On the street however, you
certainly don't want fuel pooling in the intake ports and dribbling into the
chambers when tottering about at low speed. If nothing else the excess fuel
will do it's damnedest to extinguish the spark in the
combustion chamber, drastically reducing torque. Let alone increased bore wear
caused by bore-washing and horrendous fuel consumption figures. The smoothed
finish is easier and quicker to achieve than the highly polished item. It also
gives a better over-all port surface finish - i.e. reduced lumps and bumps that
polishing simply won't remove as the polishing agent isn't resilient enough. Definitely a VFM point.
'Four-angle valve seats in head'. Again we have something distilled out
over many years as giving the best all-round result. Not the highest flowing
figures, not the thinnest 'pencil-line' seats, and not the very best of each
angle - but a good, consistently well performing set of angles and dimensions
that promote better than average air-flow that err on the side of longevity.
Having to strip the head off your motor every 3,000 miles to refresh the valve
seats/valves to maintain performance is a right pain. And
costly.
'…valves with current maximum flow profiles and Tuftrided for
durability/longevity…'. For the full story on the
valve profile deal - check out the relevant article in my 'Corner'. Just
because certain well-known and respected A-series exponents sell a particular
type of valve at a fairly stiff price doesn't mean to say they are the best. It's
just what they do. Tuftriding certainly detracts from the 'shiny' syndrome, but
boy does it improve service life!
Remaining is the combustion chamber size thing. This needs little
expansion from what has been said. I use a fairly standard chamber profile
because it is very hard to beat when used with the generally available/used
piston crown configurations. Nothing exotic is required; the standard chamber
shape gives very efficient burn characteristics. Worth noting is the bit about
increases in VE gives rise to higher dynamic CRs.
Some folk get obsessed with high static CRs. Going
too high with an efficient head will cause detonation problems.
Remember my ruling - 'Tuning should be a compromise between what's
possible and what's necessary'. Stick to this and you'll have years of
hassle-free fun.