So, I’ve learned some things over the course of the last year or so, and have some things I’m still thinking on, but figured I might was well throw them out here for discussion or comment, or just plain bench racing… Some of these are somewhat anecdotal and what I’ve gathered from conversations or reading stuff here and there.. Please correct me if I’m wrong on anything below…
On cam timing: Last year I had retarded my intake cam and advanced my exhaust cam to gain more P-V clearance while running Schrick’s with stock pistons. An unintended consequence: This reduces overlap, which increases cylinder pressure, which can make the engine more susceptible to detonation… Not sure how much of a factor this is on its own.
On running closed loop: I really want to run closed loop, I have a good sensor, have the ability to set an authority limit, but I haven’t done it yet. I had the discussion with my tuner on this, his opinion: The sensors are accurate enough when new and calibrated, but don’t do it (At WOT). You’re betting your motor on one sensor. When WBO2 sensors fail, they usually start reading rich, and want to lean out the engine. If you had a 10% authority limit, and your car was running at 12.5 AFR at WOT, and the sensor started leaning things out, it could go 13.75 AFR (if I’m understanding how authority limits work) which could be enough to blow up an engine… Lots of people are running closed loop successfully, but this is food for thought. Probably a good idea to calibrate and replace sensors regularly. Or, if your ECU allows it, allow it a 0% authority to lean things out, and a 10-15% authority to richen the mixture… And, check your corrections regularly to make sure something hasn’t changed unexpectedly. I dunno, maybe I'm worrying unnecessarily.
On timing, race fuels, and detonation: The more you advance timing, the cooler an engine will run (Per this tuner’s experience, and some of my reading, but my guess is that this has limits). The reason for this is that during normal combustion that finishes completely within the cylinder, there is a layer of boundary gasses that insulate the block from the flame front from combustion. As you retard timing, more and more of the combustion cycle is finishing as the mixture is expelled through the exhaust valves and into the exhaust, and you are getting a less efficient burn. As this happens, you lose the insulating effect of these boundary gasses, and start transferring more and more heat to the exhaust valves, exhaust ports, and exhaust, which will translate into higher overall engine temperatures starting on the exhaust side of the block. His opinion was that retarding timing to avoid knock isn’t a great solution because of this heat issue (Knock, retard timing, more heat, more knock), and if you run more advanced timing with a higher octane fuel, you’ll be better off and have a cooler running engine…
Ok, that’s probably enough for one morning, and I’m running low on coffee… Discuss…![]()







