Puma Race Engines - Cylinder Head Modifications - Part 1: Valve Seats
Puma Race Engines - Cylinder Head Modifications - Part 1: Valve Seats
Puma Race Engines - Cylinder Head Modifications - Part 1: Valve Seats
The cylinder head is the most important part of the engine to get right if high power output is the aim. Unless the head flows well, the camshaft, induction and exhaust systems are limited in what they can do. Modifying a head properly is part science, part art and relies on flowbench development and experience. There are many different head designs and each type will require a particular approach to obtain the best results. There are, however, a number of "ground rules" which will at least give a good starting point to the process of head modification - this article is designed to set out some of those rules and will hopefully help you make a more informed choice when you buy a road or race head. We'll look at the different parts of the port in order of importance to flow - this order might surprise some of you because the straight part of the port which is easy to reach and comes in for much attention with polishing wheels is not the most important in determining the final flow potential. Copyright David Baker and Puma Race Engines
VALVE SEATS
This is the most important part of the head to get right and often overlooked. The seat has to perform a number of functions: 1) - Physically seal properly so that there is no leakage of combustion gases. 2) - Cooling - most of the heat picked up by the valve head is conducted through the valve seat into the head and thence to the cooling system. If the valves run hot then power drops and detonation is more likely. Thin seats can't conduct enough heat away. 3) - Flow well - the profile of the valve seat is the controlling factor in low and mid lift valve flow. The port itself only really becomes a restricting factor at high valve lifts. Copyright David Baker and Puma Race Engines Nearly all production cylinder heads have a 3 angle valve seat as standard although it is often thought that cutting a 3 angle seat is just a performance modification. I see too many reconditioned heads where just a single angle cut has been used, resulting in a much wider seat than is standard or desirable and losing a great part of the low and mid lift flow. Production heads tend to have valve seats that are smaller than the head of the valve itself - for best flow these need recutting to the same size as the valve head. Seat widths are critical and on race engines there is a common tendency to use too narrow a seat. Narrow seats neither cool the valve head properly nor do they flow well - especially at low lift. They also burn out faster. A good width for inlet seats is between 4% and 4.5% of the valve size. The choice within this range would depend on cam lift and other factors. Seat widths towards the narrow end of the range can improve high lift flow at the expense of low lift and therefore might be chosen for race engines or for use with high lift cams. For road engines it is better to use seat widths at the high end of the range to get longer seat life and to better suit lower lift road cams. For example a CVH has 42mm inlet valves - 4.5% of 42mm is 1.9mm and that's a good choice of width for most heads.
For exhaust seats a rule of thumb is just to use the same width as for the inlet. Because exhaust valves are usually smaller than inlets this results in a proportionally wider seat than on the inlet side. In percentage terms 5% of the exhaust valve size is a good starting point for the seat width. Using the CVH as an example again, it has 37mm exhaust valves and 5% of this is 1.85mm. Most heads use a 45 degree angle for the seat itself. A top cut of 30 degrees and a bottom cut of 70 degrees are good choices for the other two angles. These 3 angles together enable the flow to make a nice smooth transition from the port into the chamber or vice versa on the exhaust side. The width of these other two cuts will depend on the head design but as long as each of them is at least as long as the seat width, then the seat geometry will work well. Many tuners use a 60 degree bottom cut, but I have always found that 70 degrees outflows 60 by a significant margin. Copyright David Baker and Puma Race Engines On the valve there should be a back cut at 30 degrees behind the 45 degree seat to smooth the flow round past the valve head and stem. Most production valves do not have this back cut and it is worth quite a few horsepower for very little work. The 45 degree seat on the valve should be the same width as the 45 degree seat in the head. A final point - you can't cut the seats properly if the guides are worn oval or oversize. So part of any head modification should be to replace worn guides before any seat work is started.
at the wheels just from detail work in this part of the cylinder head. Morever these gains were found by making the throats smaller rather than larger!
true that if the port looks like it was done with a hammer and chisel then you ought to have reasonable doubts about the machinist's craftsmanship and flowbench experience.