If the clearance volume is minimized the cylinder will start to fill sooner because the pressure will equalize closer to tdc. You would see it as lower manifold pressure and likely increased exhaust pressure even though it less boost its likely a measurable amount of power increase. Just because the intake valve is opening doesn't mean there's positive flow. There's so many factors. At least with logs you can tell if something you did helped. Switching turbines, compressor cover or ex housing, changing valve overlap, switching crossover or manifold cross section, ran in better air, etc. something's you can control and some you can't carry easily. Exhaust pressure to intake in a 900hp turbo regal could be 1:1 or 2:1 depending on the turbo and the rest of the combo. Turbobitt's car has 9 sec power with boost in the mid teens. Exhaust pressure is about even with manifold pressure at that point. If you're not pigeon holed on the turbo you can get a tremendous amount of mass flow through the engine. Using nitrous with larger than what you typically see posted about and a good wastegate and electronic boost controller can really help a lot. You're not going to get many who figured out all these relationships posting their timing data, CR, or cam lobes, separation or installed locations. Usually the turbo is the limiting factor and is run all in. The comfort zone must be exited or there's no way to get ahead of them. Sometimes it's back to the drawing board.
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