- Joined
- May 28, 2001
- Messages
- 2,554
Got the Beehive springs off.
Closed pressure at 1.75 installed Height #140
Open pressure w/cam lift of .488 = #280
.120 away from coil bind
Two seats were cracked as well as other tell tale signs of valve float according to my head guy. Tops of valve seals showed signs of float, etc.
Additionally I had two blown head gaskets. Each bank had two cylinders that the gasket was blown in between. This is wy I pulled the heads, it was going to be a simple spring swap until we aired up on cylinder and then air cam out the spark plug hole of the cylinder next to it. The gasket was still in tack (cometic) but could see where it was passing compresion from cylinder to cylinder.
This car has never reved or run right at high rpms. Normal driving was fine and it ran smooth.
New set of valve springs going in, Tom at Champion sent these to me.
Kmotion springs
installed H of 1.710 closed pressure of #140
Open pressure at .488 lift #400
These cars will fool you as fast as they can be even not running right. This car even despite the issues still could trap at 124mph on the street with my G meter. A amature like myself would be impressed with that and think, wow this car really hauls a$$!
But I have always felt something was just never quite right.
I have learned alot from this.
I hope we get it right once and for all.
Any input is well taken.
Do you guys think I am on the right track.
Dennis
I would not go away from the bee hive springs. They really do make a difference in how quick the V6 motors rev up. Those springs hold the rpms up to 7500 no problem but there was no power that high up in the rpm range.
I have run those springs on stock iron heads to TA race heads and they work well. Cams from stock to hydraulic rollers. Comp 206/206 cams to a Reed 242. You can use those springs with any cam with up to .600 lift.
I am no fan of putting 400#s of seat pressure on the valves if you dont need it. My personal feeling is that all it will do is wipe out cam lobes. And for the record not one cam has been wiped out on 7 different motors using the bee hive springs.
Just my 2 cents.