Hmmm... well actually if I recall the pressure I measured back then was more like 40-50 pisg. It also went up in a straight line basically with rpm. That was with an old p trim 72 if I recall. I've spent alot of time playing with Engine Analyzer sw for cam "design" (if you could call it that- lol). Not real sure what it said was even close to what the engine actually liked; I don't think so. Would have liked to try and use the professional engine design sw at the current job at the time
but the engineer(s) was not too confident it could predict much useful without extensive model input that I couldn't provide. So, put that stuff away and tried to use some common sense, results and input from others, etc.
It seems to me that for hp the engine likes holding the int valve open later (no surprise). Or late enough for the target hp rpm range is a better way to put I guess.
To my eye, cylinder pressure plots seem to indicate that it would probably like some help blowing down on the exh phase as well. On mine, blowdown was not "finishing" until the piston was about halfway up on the exh stroke. It does try to blow down into some 40 psi+ backpressure after all; and our ports and valves and flow capacity are probably laughably tiny IMO for the amount of exh we're trying to blow down across only 6 exh ports, with some 700-800+ hp worth of exh going on... I mean, a BBC size valve and port x8 ports is probably getting small at that power level, much less the pea-sized holes we have x6 lol
Anyway, the cylinder pressure plots seem to indicate little, if any pressure penalty from cracking it open earlier. The pressure does not drop abrubtly at EVO. But if you look, an inflection point can be seen at EVO. So, it seems an earlier opening is called for to get the blowdown started earlier.
Conversely, there doesn't seem to be any pressure beni from hanging it open past TDC for EVC. The pressure around TDC is ~ equal to the exh pressure, until the intake opens and the exh closes of course, during which it transitions over to int pressure. It looks to me like it should be ~ closed by TDC, or even a few deg earlier to allow the IVO to start earlier.
Overlap- it seems to make sense to reduce that as much as possible in our app to reduce backflow. Using typical cams, I usually see evidence of plenty of exh in the intake- gray and kinda sooty in there.
The good news is that spreading the LSA inherently does all of the above.
That leaves IVO. It doesn't seem to make sense to open it in our app until the EVC is ~ done. The EVC looks like it should be done by TDC. Somewhere around EVC then, certainly as early as possible but not too early- vague enough I guess
Bottom line, I baselined the 274" with a smallish' 224/224/110 SR. It ran ok. Low 10's at upper 130's with no boost launches. So I guess we could make the ever popular cry "it pulls like a freight train!" if we wanted and proclaim it the only way to fly (LOL), but... seemed a bit down on trap speed to me, lol. This with an old q trim, .81 4 bolt Garret hsg 76 turbo. There were some other issues as well at the time, like flexo-flyer pushrods. Never again
Anyway, went up from there to a 242/242/114, along with much better pushrods, etc. With no other changes, and not touching the wg knob the engine dropped ~ 4 psi boost at wot. From 30 down to about 26. I'd say that clearly we had moved quite a bit in the increasing airflow direction on the compressor map. It certainly felt that way- it made noticeably more power
Clearly it was now breathing substantially better at wot. Personally, I'd like to experiment with spreading the LSA even more, and would have picked a 116 LSA for it if I could have, but sadly, that is not available in our Buick v6 world w/o going to a billet core...
I think about the "perfect" hot'ish street/strip cam for it would be like a 248/248/116. Maybe even 118 or more, who knows. This for a target rev range to about 7000 rpm or so. Would be cool to do comparo testing of various cams and LSA's; wish I had an LSA matrix along with the time and money to test on a dyno, but don't...
But otoh, if people can also run 9's on a 218, then hey... that'll work for them too I guess
Some are perfectly happy with just the 1/4 mile results... Others like to try and tinker and maximize the engine. Turbos are powerful beasts no matter what stick choice they have to put up with
Anyway, JMO- always one of my favorite topics
TurboTR

It seems to me that for hp the engine likes holding the int valve open later (no surprise). Or late enough for the target hp rpm range is a better way to put I guess.
To my eye, cylinder pressure plots seem to indicate that it would probably like some help blowing down on the exh phase as well. On mine, blowdown was not "finishing" until the piston was about halfway up on the exh stroke. It does try to blow down into some 40 psi+ backpressure after all; and our ports and valves and flow capacity are probably laughably tiny IMO for the amount of exh we're trying to blow down across only 6 exh ports, with some 700-800+ hp worth of exh going on... I mean, a BBC size valve and port x8 ports is probably getting small at that power level, much less the pea-sized holes we have x6 lol

Conversely, there doesn't seem to be any pressure beni from hanging it open past TDC for EVC. The pressure around TDC is ~ equal to the exh pressure, until the intake opens and the exh closes of course, during which it transitions over to int pressure. It looks to me like it should be ~ closed by TDC, or even a few deg earlier to allow the IVO to start earlier.
Overlap- it seems to make sense to reduce that as much as possible in our app to reduce backflow. Using typical cams, I usually see evidence of plenty of exh in the intake- gray and kinda sooty in there.
The good news is that spreading the LSA inherently does all of the above.
That leaves IVO. It doesn't seem to make sense to open it in our app until the EVC is ~ done. The EVC looks like it should be done by TDC. Somewhere around EVC then, certainly as early as possible but not too early- vague enough I guess

Bottom line, I baselined the 274" with a smallish' 224/224/110 SR. It ran ok. Low 10's at upper 130's with no boost launches. So I guess we could make the ever popular cry "it pulls like a freight train!" if we wanted and proclaim it the only way to fly (LOL), but... seemed a bit down on trap speed to me, lol. This with an old q trim, .81 4 bolt Garret hsg 76 turbo. There were some other issues as well at the time, like flexo-flyer pushrods. Never again


I think about the "perfect" hot'ish street/strip cam for it would be like a 248/248/116. Maybe even 118 or more, who knows. This for a target rev range to about 7000 rpm or so. Would be cool to do comparo testing of various cams and LSA's; wish I had an LSA matrix along with the time and money to test on a dyno, but don't...
But otoh, if people can also run 9's on a 218, then hey... that'll work for them too I guess


Anyway, JMO- always one of my favorite topics

TurboTR