By the way, sorry for the blurry pictures, I had a few margaritas before I took them!

The SBC valve sizes are 1.94/1.50, the stock jeep valves are 1.91/1.50. So the intakes are a little larger. Maybe help the bigger stroker take a deeper breath.Muad'Dib wrote:Whats the reasoning for using SBC valves? Are they bigger than stock (i would assume so). If so, than what kind of benefit would that give you?
I would also assume some kind of extra machine work had to have been done to make the SBC valves work. Would the cost be worth what you gain from it?
dwg86 wrote:I need to find my paper work from the shop. I think he said I was good to .600. Mopar says those springs are good for .525 lift installed at 1.640, mine are installed at 1.680. So 1.680-1.640=.040 .040+.525=.565. So I should be good for .565 lift. I'm not even close to that.
Since you do this for a living... do valve springs loose some spring rate after they are broken in? The reason I am asking is my valve spring pressure on the seat was more than what Mopar advertises them to be. I remember someone else posting about having the problem with the Mopar springs. my spring rate is 130 installed at 1.680. Mopar states 120 @1.640.
dwg86 wrote:What type big valves did you use...LS1?
How do you intend to achieve an installed height of 1.800" or 1.850"? , having never used chevy valves on a jeep head yet , are these longer ? . There are limitations to what can be safely removed from the spring pads and sinking valves to increase installed height is not recomended either.hatem61 wrote:Hi there,
I normally read and try to learn quietly but I couldn't resist asking this time.
Briefly I have some stuff that I intend to use it on a slow but undergiong stroker project, right at this moment I do not have all part numbers records and specs, but I have the head machined to accept Chevy valves ( 2.02" and 1.6" ) , I have the comp cam 68-239-4 that has a lift of 0.512", I am willing to take my chance despite of the warnings, I read somewhere that it runs great and does not really negatively upset the PCM.
Now closer to the point: compcam recommend the 926 springs that are rated 415 lb/in, and have a seat pressure of 109 lb/in at 1.8" installed height.
Golen Engines website shows that they do undercut the spring seat to accomodate the diameter of the valve and to have the right installed height without binding.
Question1: is that seat pressure really too high for the cam used?
Question2: Compcam shows different springs pressures at different installed heights for the same spring including the 926. At maximum lift, the spring load would not exceed 317 lb/in. If the spring rate is too high, what would be a reasonable pressure for such a setup? By compcam, the 926 is rated 88 lb/in at 1.850" installed height. Would that be more desirable?
Thank you for the advise
Mopar spring rate is is 270 lbs, on a used set.hatem61 wrote:Hi again. Please anyone, if I got it all wrong, then go ahead and clarify and I will be more than willing to listen, it won't upset me.![]()
Starting with definitions :
Spring rate is how many pounds of weight are required to compress the spring by one inch, so taking the 926 compcam spring rate of 415 lbs/in as an example means we need 415 pounds to compress the spring by one inch.I do not have this spec for Mopar springs.
At 1.64" the Mopar spring would be 113 lbs. I have read that you want 100-110 for a street driven engine seat load at installed height with a mild cam. I went on the side of caution and installed them at ~1.69, which gave me installed 100 seat load, 232 seat load on the exhaust side open (.485" lift). I also talked with my machinist and he agreed that was the best route for the Comp Cam 68-231-4. He also agreed that the Comp Cam springs were too aggressive. Also, from my research open load should be no more than 250 lbs open, again for a street engine.Load at installed height refers to the amount of pressure in pounds created by the spring with the valve closed at a given installed height, so comparing 926 compcam springs to the 4.0L stock springs, it is 109 Lbs at 1.8" installed height and 71-79 Lbf ( this is pounds force ) at 1.64" installed height.
At approximately the maximum lift ( 0.512" with the 68-239-4 ), the compcam spring is rated at approximately 320 Lbs, whereas the stock Mopar would be 202 - 218 Lbf.
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