Hi Guy,
Many thanks for taking teh time to answer in such detail. I read your reply and examine your photos with great interest. Its really helping me to understand a bit better about squish, swirl etc..
This discussion would be easier to understand if you could offer a photo of the head you're using with the big bore gasket laid on it,
Click on picture for a large image:
Closeup with value in
Closeup with valve out
Combustion chamber with inlet valve in
Combustion Chamber valve out
Well, the more flat area of combustion chamber in close proximity to the piston at tdc - so the more squish there will be.
Block (I know it looks nasty). Covered in oil and a unfortunatley a bit of dirt..Deck height is zero!! This means there will be a 1.5 mm gap between the head and block on the overlapping region. Valve cutouts are obviously for the 16 valves (born in a 106 GTi 16v)
Often if you mill a head right down the squish bands (regions) get much bigger. Sure, squish improves in-cylinder fuel mixing by vortex generation but is much less important on high speed engines than road cars. It's one of those enhances part-throttle performance things.
The plan was not to skim the head (only a very think layer maybe). Because I calculate that with the longer stroke and zero deck height the CR will be about 12:1 with a standard gasket.
I would maybe not alter the existing bands or grind out the adjacent overlapping regions of the head.
Ok.....But anyway this was my original idea. Since the cylinder was now bigger it would give me the opportunity to free up the space between the valve and the edge of the combustion chamber, and still keep the contour of the figure of 8 . Just an idea..
You are putting a head designed for a small cylinder (75mm?) on a cylinder of 78.5mm dia right?
Yes that is right :D But I just measured everything again and hopefully I don't confuse matters :?
Diameter cylinder 78.5 mm (1.6)
Diameter head gasket 79.5mm
Thickness head gasket 1.5mm
Diameter combustion chamber 76mm
Hopefully I have explained a little better this time :roll:
As for exhaust valve working better when it's shrouded, I don't understand the reasoning for that. The power loss from any 'deshrouding' of same - if there even is any shrouding here (which I cannot see) may in fact have come from non-associated cause induced by the 'deshrouding mod itself.
Be cautious of 'do this - do that' advice unless back-to-back flowbench or dyno figures are cited and the op displayed in detail pictures.
Yes you are of course right. It comes from a book but there is no evidence, I have to take the authors word for it. Hope its ok I quote here..The book is over 20 years old now. But actually an interesting read :shock: Just for your info..
"The exhaust valve requires very little deshrouding at all. I generally work to a figure of 60% valve lift for the radius between the valve head and the chamber wall. It is a mistake to exceed this figure as the exhaust valve flow very well partially shrouded in fact in seems to enjoy being shrouded. I remember when I was able to gain 4% bhp on a VW by shrouding the valve a little"
A. Graham Bell, Performance Tuning in Theory and Practice
Regards
Christopher