by Chirag Asaravala
The average enthusiast fails to give adequate consideration to valve
springs. This is in part due to the abundance of fully-assembled
aftermarket cylinder heads which give an enthusiast a false
sense of security by the fact that they come preassembled
with new valves, springs, and retainers. The fact is the valvespring
is the single most critical assembly in the "success"
of a well built and well tuned engine combination. By success
I mean the likelihood that the engine will produce all of
the power that is represented by your carefully selected combination
of displacement, camshaft, cylinder head flow and induction.
It is quite often the valvetrain that is the culprit when
an engine fails to meet its projected power levels.
How Valve Springs Effect the Engine
Thomas Griffin leads the R&D
group at Comp Cams. He has a Masters degree in Mechanical
Engineering and spent nine years in Comp's valvespring
program, performing a variety of valvetrain dynamics testing.. |
Most gearheads are well versed on the relationship of cam specifications
to engine rpm range and consequently to horsepower. As a result
they are able to deduce that the faster you spin a motor, and
the greater the valves are opened, the stiffer a valve spring
needs to be to control that valve. The understanding quite often
ends there - at the confirmation that open and closed spring
pressures are adequate for the camshaft they have selected.
But this is not enough, and if we are to limit our understanding
of valvetrain function to only the idea that the spring must
control the valve without "valve float" then we are
surely leaving power on the table. There is much more to a valve
system, and with the expertise of Thomas Griffin, head of R&D
at Comp Cams, we're able to convey those ideas to you in this
article.
As with many other areas of engine and vehicle technology,
much of the understanding and innovation begins on the race
track and then is extrapolated and adapted for the general
consumer. Valvetrain understanding is no different. In racing
classes where camshafts are bound to a maximum lift rule,
engine builders are forced to find ways to make power. As
a result camshafts are designed with very aggressive lobe
profiles that essentially launch the valve open over the nose
of the cam lobe. This can yield measurable increases in dynamic
lift and duration. However, the tradeoff is that a stiffer
valve spring is needed to bring the valve back to the seat.
Builders quickly realized that while they could create lobe
ramps to aggressively move the tappet and valve, there was
a point of diminishing returns due to the weight of the spring
resulting from the need for more spring pressure. R&D
engineers at companies like Comp Cams were of course inspired
to help meet their customers' requirements, and conducted
research of their own. What they learned was an understanding
of the snowball effect that results from increasing spring
pressure. Going to a stiffer spring usually means a larger
diameter spring. This, in turn, necessitates a larger retainer.
The stiffer spring will likely also mandate a stiffer pushrod.
So now not only has spring pressure increased, but so has
weight and resultant force required to move the valve. At
5000 rpms the effects are drastic. The force required to move
the valve off the seat and to compress the spring are so great
that pushrod and camshaft bending occur. As a result the camshaft
must rotate further to get the valve off the seat - resulting
in reduced lift and duration. The end result- increasing cam
lift in this way does not result in a linear increase in power.
After a point you need to make proportionally larger increases
in lift to get the same amount of gain. Another way to think
of it; opening the valve another .020" may net 20 horsepower,
but the next .020" may be just half that gain because
of the parasitic losses from the stiffer (and heavier) spring.
It's just a few grams!
It's easy to dismiss all this because of the fact we're talking
about a small amount of weight. After all, relative to a 500
lb. motor, something that weighs as much as a nut or a bolt
seems so insignificant. However in the context of a valvetrain
that is moving thousands of times per minute, a few grams
exerts an exponential amount of force and inertia. While it
takes crankshaft power to overcome these forces, the losses
don't end there. The heavy spring pressure can collapse the
lifter at high rpms, resulting in an uncontrolled valve -
at best this limits engine rpm, at worst the pistons hit the
valves and mayhem ensues.
There
are other downsides as well, in the form of heat and metallurgical
stress on all components between, and including, the rocker
arm, spring, pushrod, tappet and camshaft. It is not at all
uncommon for any of these components to fail simply because
of spring pressure.
A Better Design
The limitation, until recently, has been linear-rate coil
springs. These are springs that have a consistent rate throughout
their compression - determined by the thickness of the wire,
the number of coils, and the overall mean diameter of the
spring. When a racer needs more spring pressure this means
slightly thicker wire, usually an increase in diameter, and
sometimes an increase in height in order to maintain adequate
distance between the wires to prevent coil bind. In all cases
the spring becomes heavier, adding to the snowball effect.
To end this vicious cycle, engineers at Comp began experimenting
with progressive rate springs. Such springs vary in their
pressure as a function of compression. Whereas a linear-rate
spring will exert, for instance, 200lbs of pressure for every
.100" compression, a progressive rate spring may exert 200lbs
the first .100" of and 250lbs the second .100". This is achieved
by altering the spring diameter over the length of the spring,
the spacing between coils, and even the shape of the wire
(ovate versus traditional round wire). Continue
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