MacaveliMC wrote:ok, excellent, I put in numbers using KB944 pistons, over sized 0.030", using the 258 crank and the 242 connecting rods, decking the block 0.020 and plaining the head 0.010.
With the crane cam and a gasket thickness of 0.043 I am reading from the stroker calc, a SCR of 9.78:1 with a quench of 0.0505. The smaller gasket brings the quench to 0.039, which seems dangerously low to me.
Are these ### with the the head and or, block decked?
Putting the numbers into the DCR calculator and my local altitude of about 900 feet, I am seeing a DCR of about 7.88, which I believe can easily run 87 octane
8.1 (in DCR) is considered at the hight end of streetable compression, so 7.88 may reqire 91 to be happy.
I am wondering if I should even try to bring the DCR up, by maybe plaining the head. I still don't think I understand plaining the head. If you are taking metal off the head, how is that not lowering the quench? Maybe I am thinking of the wrong surface.
I had a hard time with this as well.
Quench is the distence between the top flat part of the piston and the flat surfice of the head. if you shave .010" of the head. Compression will increase equally for SCR as well as DCR.....however,
Quench has NOT change at all.The piston is still the same distence to the flat surfice of the piston to the flat surfice of the head..........compression has went up becose there is less cc of space in the combuston chamber of the head but Quench is unchanged
Now, if you shave or Deck the block .010", the head now is closer to the piston at TDC, which means the quench is now now tighter by .010" BUT the compression ratio has also when up as the piston is higher in the bore (less cc at TDC)
You could shave .100" of the head and the compression would be extreamly high.........but the Quench would be un changed.
If you don't need to shave the head
don't........Unless your after HIGH Compression.
Make sence?