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I have 4v heads and bought chevy springs and spacers . This was suggestet by an verry nice engine build thread here in the forum.
The problem is now : should the spring spacer sitt flat on the bottom of the head ? This means we have to mill some material from the place where the oem spring is located ? Thanks a lot for your help!
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you'd want any dead weight under the spring where it doesn't move, otherwise the spring needs to control that weight for no good reason

machining spring seat pads for alternate springs is common. if there's not enough material around the remaining perimeter you can use a locator cup to center on the outside diameter of the valve guide to hold the base of the spacer/spring in place. addition material equal to the thickness of the locator cup will also need to be removed to achieve correct valve spring installed height/pressure
The 351C is equipped with a “big block” style valve train, meaning large (heavy) valves, large (1.5” diameter) valve springs, high ratio rocker arms, sturdy push rods, and sturdy (thick walled) tappets. Valve springs for flat tappet camshaft applications should have 115 to 130 pounds seated force and 300 to 330 pounds force at maximum lift (over-the-nose). Valve springs for roller tappet camshaft applications should have 150 to 160 pounds seated force and 370 to 400 pounds force at maximum lift. As a generalization valve springs for the 351C are sourced from valve springs designed for the big block Chevy. However, be aware that the installed height of a 351C valve spring is shorter (1.82”) than the installed height of a BBC spring. Shortening the installed height of a valve spring increases the seated force and shortens the spring’s maximum lift spec. The maximum lift should not exceed the valve spring’s “coil bind height” + 0.100”. The installed height of a spring can be increased by fly-cutting the spring seats or by installing valves with 0.100” longer stems. Longer valves impact rocker arm geometry however (as do higher lift camshafts).

I've been working on the following flat tappet valve spring chart, but its incomplete. The info in red has not been verified, and there is one blank field too.

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  • FT_valve_springs
You make no mention of your application (street or racing) or any of the engine parameters. For instance what's the stroke? This makes it difficult to comment on the camshaft.

Although its rated at 294 degrees duration, that's measured at 0.015", the standard for rating the duration of a solid tappet camshaft however is 0.020". Therefore the cam looks a bit bigger than it really is when compared to other cams. However based on the lash specification the cam will begin lifting the valves at 0.013", so the advertised valve events aren't too far off.

Based on the advertised valve events the cam's overlap is 74 degrees. I do not recommend anything greater than 60 degrees overlap for a street engine. Peak horsepower shall occur at about 4000 FPM mean piston speed, which with a 3.500 crank is equivalent to 6850 RPM.

The net valve lift is 0.585" which is compatible with the Crane spring.

Net Lift = (0.351 lobe lift x 1.73 rocker ratio) - 0.022" lash
For your described application I would suggest a solid tappet camshaft similar to this:

274°/288° duration @ 0.020 (advertised)
113°/116° lobe centerlines
238°/252° duration @ 0.050
36° Major Intensity
52° overlap
114.5° LSA

Such a cam will make peak BHP at approximately 3500 FPM mean piston speed, which is equivalent to 6000 rpm with a 3.500" stroke crankshaft. This complements the 4V cylinder heads. It will still rev as high as is "prudent" with an engine equipped with the factory connecting rods (~7000 rpm); but it will behave much better at lower rpm for street operation ... and with the Webers.

Food for thought.
George, what do you think ? Should I buy a new cam ? The Problem is : I can only buy from Summit. I can not buy from to much diffrent stores, beccause of the tax and shipping costs.
I have to pay about 20 USD per packet only for custom clereance+ tax . Also the freight costs are verry high from smaler suppliers.

So I would like to buy , what summit have.

The next problem is: I can not balance the crank , because nobody have masterweights for the V8 crank:-( What do you think is the max RPM for a stock Engine with ARP nuts ?

Do you know a good harmonic balancer for external balancing ?
Ital Ford, no the engine is balanced , because it is stock. We changend the bearings and the stock nuts.

but : when you change only the pistons , you do not need to balance the engine !
Only when you change the connecting rods you have to balance it. The piston is a part wich moves only up and down and do not have anything to do with the rotating parts.

George, thanks again.

All cams from Summit I found are between 108 and 110 LSA, when they have a higher lift.

Its realy difficult to find one... I will ask summit , if they have parts wich where not listed in their online catoalog...
Crower #15388 is similar to the Windsor cam above, but it is for the 351C.

About 61° overlap, 112° LSA.

The advertised lift is 0.524/0.533
The "net" lift is 0.502/0.509

Obviously we can do better in terms of valve lift if we do a custom cam.




The best Crane cam I found was #521131, the valve lift was better. It had about 60° overlap, but 108° LSA. The exhaust valve opened too late, the intake valve closed too early. Altering the cam timing to improve one aspect only makes the other worse.



The cam grinders are capable of producing better work, but the marketplace, magazines, SEMA, don't demand it from them. Their bottom line is to manufacture and market what sells, and what is competitive with the other cam grinders.
I'm not familiar with Scorpion tappets, other than the fact that they are inexpensive ... that's why everybody purchases them! So to be safe I must reply no, unless the block has tappet bore bushings with 0.060" restrictions the Scorpion tappets are most likely inappropriate.

If the block has no tappet bore bushings, then the solid flat tappet must be of the design with internal oil metering plates. Speed Pro AT2000 solid flat tappet. Manufactured in the US by Johnson Lifters. Also sold by Crower Cams under part number 66915X980-16P. Thee are the original type tappets employed in the Boss 351 Mustang engine. There was a most specific reason why Ford changed their tappet design. This is because tappets employing edge orifice" type oil metering will in every situation send too much oil to the valve train.
Scorpion lifters... so new I can't find them on their web page, just this intro

http://scorpionperformance.com...l-solid-roller-lifte

Summit only lists a single PN for Mopar and the lone comment goes like this,

"I thought I was getting a different set of lifters but Scorpion's SRP2312BBR lifters are the EXACT same as Comp Cams 8921-16 lifters. I've had pushrods fall out of place with these lifters and nobody can explain why. I've tried different pushrod preloads but nothing so far has helped. No responses to my request from Scorpion."
https://www.summitracing.com/p.../?sortReviews=Newest

also FWIW, being such a new product with no 351C specific end user feedback, there's no telling if the Scorpion rockers repeat other makers Ooopsies regarding oil hole location & size, gonna have to agree with G that to be safe I would not be confident of oil control without metering orifice restrictor bushings in place

but definitely looking forward to hear your review, more products available is a good thing
thanks again :-)

I have those roller rockers :
https://www.summitracing.com/int/parts/scc-scp1024

and I found this cam : CRN-524551

Hydraulic flat tappet
Basic Operating RPM Range: 3,000-6,000
Intake Duration at 050 inch Lift: 230
Exhaust Duration at 050 inch Lift: 234
Duration at 050 inch Lift: 230 int./234 exh.
Advertised Intake Duration: 292
Advertised Exhaust Duration: 296
Advertised Duration: 292 int./296 exh.
Intake Valve Lift with Factory Rocker Arm Ratio: 0.536 in.
Exhaust Valve Lift with Factory Rocker Arm Ratio: 0.545 in.
Valve Lift with Factory Rocker Arm Ratio: 0.536 int./0.545 exh.
Lobe Separation (degrees): 114

What du you think about it ?

The custom cam projekt is to difficult, because my engine machinist have not the tools for doing an adjustable valvtrain.
I have to buy everything here and pay tax ec,.. for this money , I can import a complete engine :-(
Hi Peter

The most recent cam you've mentioned is a Crane Cams camshaft, a fairly old grind, from the days when Harvey Crane was still around and they ground good cams ... about 1980s or possibly earlier. In fact I remember camshafts with these lobe centerlines from the 1960s ... and I've used them myself for recent cams. The lobe lift is not up to modern standards due to the age of the grind.

The notable characteristics include low overlap and placement of the overlap event fairly well within the dwell period, both will promote good low rpm power. The intake valve closes early enough to avoid reversion and to set the dynamic compression properly, but not too early. All of these things will work well with the Weber carbs, and help avoid a fuel plume and tuning headaches. The exhaust valve opens early enough to promote high rpm power and over-rev with a wide range of exhaust systems. I think the camshaft would work well with your Webber carbureted engine, as long as you can accept the limitations of the lobe lift. On the positive side, the lobe lift is gentle enough to work very well with the factory rocker arms.

The camshaft's advertised duration is based upon lift at 0.004, rather than the industry standard of lift at 0.006, so I've had to make an educated estimate regarding advertised duration at 0.006, and valve events. Here's the specs based upon my estimate:

282°/286° duration @ 0.006 (advertised)
109°/119° lobe centerlines
230°/234° duration @ 0.050
52° Hydraulic Intensity
56° overlap
114° LSA

EVO = 82° BBDC
IVO = 32° BTDC
EVC = 24° ATDC
IVC = 70° ABDC

Lobe lift = 0.3101/0.3150
Theoretical lift (advertised)= 0.536/0.545
Net lift = 0.528/0.536
No, not "off the shelf".

Having an engine that performs the way you want it to perform is more important that how much horsepower it makes ... unless you are racing the car competitively. If you were racing competitively you would not accept the limitations of shipping costs, local availability, etc. Believe me, the 351 Cleveland with 4V heads is a bad-ass engine. It accelerates like few engines do. Its not hard to put together a 351c that will perform unbelievably. All these questions aren't necessary. Just follow sticky #3

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