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Fwd: RE: 30 degree valve seats and 3 angle valve grid

To: tjh173@yahoo.com, 6pack@autox.team.net
Subject: Fwd: RE: 30 degree valve seats and 3 angle valve grid
From: William Whitmoyer <wwhitmoyer@samsonite.net>
Date: Mon, 09 Dec 2002 16:25:18 -0500
Tim:

Yes, you are correct. However, since I was skewing slightly off topic in my 
last post in order to illustrate a point, I wrote in the message (bold 
added, entire message re-listed below):

 > for most of the Pro Stock race teams, they can figure out what size
 > valves
 > each team uses and at what angle they run them in the heads (ie not
 > the
 > angle of the valve seat grind, but the angle of the whole valve)
 > based on
 > the valve reliefs cut in the pistons. Each of these teams are
 >

I did jump back into valve seat grind angles rather abruptly in the second 
paragraph, which was perhaps confusing.  The story about Wiseco was meant 
only to illustrate my point that there is no one right answer in high 
performance engine building, a point which I then applied to the particular 
question about value seat grind angles.  Sorry if there was any confusion.

William

Date: Fri, 6 Dec 2002 16:37:26 -0800 (PST)
From: Timothy Holbrook <tjh173@yahoo.com>
Subject: Fwd: RE: 30 degree valve seats and 3 angle valve grid
I think we may be talking about the wrong valve angles here. The only
valve angle that can be ascertained by looking at cutouts in the
pistons would be the angle of the valve in the cylinder head, relative
to the cylinder. For example, a TR250/6 (whose valves go straight up
and down in relation to the cylinder) have a valve angle of 0. If you
were to tilt the stem of the valve outwards, then the valve angle would
increase, to a max of 90, which would be exactly perpendicular to the
cylinder (and would never be actually done). This is valve angle, and
is what Wiseco was discussing.
The angle of the grind on the valve seat is what was being discussed on
the list. By beveling the face where the valve meets the seat, you can
smooth out the flow of air as it moves from the ports to the combustion
chamber. As was mentioned, the ideal (in terms of airflow) is a
perfectly smooth radiused edge. But this wouldn't seal well, and would
be very expensive to machine. Most cars use a one angle, 45 degree cut
on the seat. For a performance head, a 3 angle valve job is common,
which uses 3 different cuts (all at different angles) to make a
smoother edge on the seat. 5 angle valve jobs are also used, but this
is even more expensive, and you start to loose some durability because
there is a very thin meeting point between the valve and seat. You can
also start to run into sealing problems. You'd probably only use a
5-angle on a full-out race engine that sees frequent rebuilds.
Tim Holbrook
1971 TR6

- --- William Whitmoyer <wwhitmoyer@samsonite.net> wrote:
 > Date: Fri, 06 Dec 2002 10:34:14 -0500
 > To: 6pack@autox.team.net
 > From: William Whitmoyer <wwhitmoyer@samsonite.net>
 > Subject: RE: 30 degree valve seats and 3 angle valve grid
 >
 > Interesting tidbit: I was at the Wiseco piston factory a couple of
 > weeks
 > ago with the local Porsche club...the tour, incidentally, was really
 > cool
 > as they do Formula 1 super-alloy metal forging-I now know what the
 > Ferrari
 > F1 pedal box looks like...but they mentioned that since they do the
 > pistons
 > for most of the Pro Stock race teams, they can figure out what size
 > valves
 > each team uses and at what angle they run them in the heads (ie not
 > the
 > angle of the valve seat grind, but the angle of the whole valve)
 > based on
 > the valve reliefs cut in the pistons. Each of these teams are
 > producing
 > almost the same horsepower, but they all get there with wildly
 > different
 > size valves and valve angles, according to Wiseco.
 >
 > Moral of the story: There is no one correct answer. Every engine is
 > its
 > own package, and without serious flowbench/dyno time with your
 > particular
 > set-up, you will never really know whether a 30 degree cut or 45
 > degree cut
 > is going to make any noticeable difference. It's great fun to plan,
 > but
 > don't lose any sleep over it. Personally, I'd be more worried about
 > finding a knowledgeable and skilled engine builder who could do the
 > work
 > correctly, at whatever the valve grind angles you (or the builder)
 > choose.


William Whitmoyer
69 TR6
72 Fiat Spider
90 BMW iX
91 CRX Si

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