Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

the heck with cams how about lifters

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #16
    Originally posted by firechiken
    Little off topic, but I remember a few years ago someone was developing a solenoid system of operating valves. It couldn't control lift, of course, but it would allow for instant closing and opening and unlimited duration based on engine parameters. Anyone know what became of this?
    Its in production now. http://www.bmwworld.com/engines/valvetronic.htm
    1997 Z34 Monte,: testing 4 exh cam\'s, RSM STB, K&N, Eagle077 245/40/ZR18 Nitto Extreme
    1972 3/4 ton 4X4 longbed, built 350, 400 auto, 6\" spring lift, 35\" AT/BFG\'s, dana 60 front axle, 14 bolt gm w/detroit locker 4.56 gears. My ricer smasher

    Comment


    • #17
      No, that's not it. What I'm talking about has no cams at all.

      Comment


      • #18
        oh
        1997 Z34 Monte,: testing 4 exh cam\'s, RSM STB, K&N, Eagle077 245/40/ZR18 Nitto Extreme
        1972 3/4 ton 4X4 longbed, built 350, 400 auto, 6\" spring lift, 35\" AT/BFG\'s, dana 60 front axle, 14 bolt gm w/detroit locker 4.56 gears. My ricer smasher

        Comment


        • #19
          Originally posted by butchville
          if you can bleed lift down you can pump it up. your right though lift on cams the same as before. controled lifter pump up it can work just ain't had time to work it out anybody know how our lifters ar put together.
          The lifters will come apart if you bang them plunger side down against a piece of wood. You want the lifter to hit wood as square as possible. May take a few times pretty hard. (thats how I took one apart. is there another way?)
          UPDATE!!!!!!!!
          YES THERE is a better way. Take a 13/16 deep socket. Put lifter on it wither plunger pointed into socket. Than bang socket on concrete a few times. Plunger will fall into socket. No chance of damaging lifter this way.
          1997 Z34 Monte,: testing 4 exh cam\'s, RSM STB, K&N, Eagle077 245/40/ZR18 Nitto Extreme
          1972 3/4 ton 4X4 longbed, built 350, 400 auto, 6\" spring lift, 35\" AT/BFG\'s, dana 60 front axle, 14 bolt gm w/detroit locker 4.56 gears. My ricer smasher

          Comment


          • #20
            update edited in above
            1997 Z34 Monte,: testing 4 exh cam\'s, RSM STB, K&N, Eagle077 245/40/ZR18 Nitto Extreme
            1972 3/4 ton 4X4 longbed, built 350, 400 auto, 6\" spring lift, 35\" AT/BFG\'s, dana 60 front axle, 14 bolt gm w/detroit locker 4.56 gears. My ricer smasher

            Comment


            • #21
              Talked with Rhodes Lifter today. They said they could modify our original lifters to act like rhodes. For $125.00 + shipping for a set.
              1997 Z34 Monte,: testing 4 exh cam\'s, RSM STB, K&N, Eagle077 245/40/ZR18 Nitto Extreme
              1972 3/4 ton 4X4 longbed, built 350, 400 auto, 6\" spring lift, 35\" AT/BFG\'s, dana 60 front axle, 14 bolt gm w/detroit locker 4.56 gears. My ricer smasher

              Comment


              • #22
                Money better spent towards reground cams.
                '99 Z-28 - Weekend Driver
                '98 Dodge Neon - Winter Beater
                '84 X-11 - Time and Money Pit
                '88 Fiero Formula - Bone stock for now

                Quote of the week:
                Originally posted by Aaron
                This is why I don't build crappy headers. I'm not sure, I don't know too much about welding.

                Comment


                • #23
                  I was thnking both with a pretty radical cam grind i cam up with.

                  around:
                  4.00 lift
                  290 duration
                  1997 Z34 Monte,: testing 4 exh cam\'s, RSM STB, K&N, Eagle077 245/40/ZR18 Nitto Extreme
                  1972 3/4 ton 4X4 longbed, built 350, 400 auto, 6\" spring lift, 35\" AT/BFG\'s, dana 60 front axle, 14 bolt gm w/detroit locker 4.56 gears. My ricer smasher

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Originally posted by firechiken
                    No, that's not it. What I'm talking about has no cams at all.
                    I belive that was Mercedes, and they did use solenoids and no cam, but if I remember right, the chassis electrical had to change to a 50+ volt system to operate right.
                    -60v6's 2nd Jon M.
                    91 Black Lumina Z34-5 speed
                    92 Black Lumina Z34 5 speed (getting there, slowly... follow the progress here)
                    94 Red Ford Ranger 2WD-5 speed
                    Originally posted by Jay Leno
                    Tires are cheap clutches...

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Ah, neither one of us were thinking out our butts!

                      Welcome to the next step in engine technology. Camless engines use solenoid valves instead of the conventional camshaft, cams, gears, rocker arms combination. Solenoid valves are driven electronically allowing completely freedom of valve control. A …


                      And why are they doing this? Good question... one guy answers it like this:
                      Think about the tradeoffs a cam has to make on engine performance, Ohl said. A racing cam, in one example, is shaped to optimize engine output at high speeds without regard for the way it roughens up an idle. With camless valvetrains, "We don't have to live with that compromise," he said.
                      This found part way down on:

                      -60v6's 2nd Jon M.
                      91 Black Lumina Z34-5 speed
                      92 Black Lumina Z34 5 speed (getting there, slowly... follow the progress here)
                      94 Red Ford Ranger 2WD-5 speed
                      Originally posted by Jay Leno
                      Tires are cheap clutches...

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Originally posted by pocket-rocket
                        Ah, neither one of us were thinking out our butts!

                        Welcome to the next step in engine technology. Camless engines use solenoid valves instead of the conventional camshaft, cams, gears, rocker arms combination. Solenoid valves are driven electronically allowing completely freedom of valve control. A …


                        And why are they doing this? Good question... one guy answers it like this:
                        Think about the tradeoffs a cam has to make on engine performance, Ohl said. A racing cam, in one example, is shaped to optimize engine output at high speeds without regard for the way it roughens up an idle. With camless valvetrains, "We don't have to live with that compromise," he said.
                        This found part way down on:

                        http://www.memagazine.org/backissues...ontrolled.html
                        Are you in referance to ruffing up the idle? If so thats the whole point of rhodes type lifters. The help smooth idle and raise vacuum at an idle.
                        1997 Z34 Monte,: testing 4 exh cam\'s, RSM STB, K&N, Eagle077 245/40/ZR18 Nitto Extreme
                        1972 3/4 ton 4X4 longbed, built 350, 400 auto, 6\" spring lift, 35\" AT/BFG\'s, dana 60 front axle, 14 bolt gm w/detroit locker 4.56 gears. My ricer smasher

                        Comment

                        Working...
                        X