Nope, 5 speed, here! Oh yeah, you had the N/A cams, didn't you? I've spoken with Sander (sandspeed) in the past regarding these and he seems to be having no issues (aside from the spun rod bearing). IIRC he adjusted the idle the wrong way (by playing with the screw you aren't supposed to) and was pulling about 15 mm Hg of vacuum but I didn't think he had any CEL's. As long as the car runs, and isn't throwing codes, I will be happy.There is the Idle Air Control screw. At idle u could hear mine hissing from 50yds. Inspection here requires an idle below 900rpms.
Don't get me wrong, I was FINE with the lope at idle, the ECU was not.
The idle was less lopey with the gears at +6 and -5 (in/ex) but the ECU still picked up a "misfire" when I would come to a stoplight unless I put it in neutral as I slowed down.
Do you have a auto-tragic too, Magnum? Otherwise, I wouldn't anticipate a problem with the CEL.
Everyone that we showed the cam doctor profile to said "not on a street car".
The cams seem to be designed specifically to make power (NA power) up to and beyond 8-8500rpms. Great for drag racing I gather.
from what i heard from the guy that actually *made* the cam's.... 8000rpm is the practical limit on the overlap provided (and you'll run into head flow limitations, not to mention the mechanical limitations of the motor)... pull the overlap back, and they wont breathe up to 8k. You can open it up further and it'll go nuts...advance the cam's wholesale they'll be even more spastic, but most of the aggression is coming out of the overlap, and the overall advance that they come with. The lift isn't that crazy, and they are not enormous duration cams. They do, however, open and close the valves very fast (very steep ramp rate)Everyone that we showed the cam doctor profile to said "not on a street car".
The cams seem to be designed specifically to make power (NA power) up to and beyond 8-8500rpms. Great for drag racing I gather.
stand alone might help....i think the missfire might be ignition related (air doesn't conduct electricity - more air requires a bigger spark to create an ark over the plug....stock coils are s***...etc). Thats just a guess but i'd start beefing the ignition up and go with stand alone....mind you - that ruins you for testing..unless you made the setup somehow reversable (get your ticket, then put the cams and stand alone in, pull it all out next time you need to get a test).I hear you loud and clear, LW.
I was careful in my statement to not imply that there is anything wrong with them. I LOVE them and they're great. I wanted desperately to find a way to make them work and we tried LOTS of things. Perhaps a standalone and a MTX swap would have done the trick?
no doubt man...no doubt - just repeating what the cam guy told me...The mechanic I am working with is VERY knowledgable and trustworthy.
He is THE goto guy around here for hi-perf. They have a 1700hp Fox body that runs in the street radials classes. Totally insane.
I really think we tried everything we could.
As far as the head work it was a basic job, 3 angle on valves, seats radiused, ports smoothed some. Nothing radical. But it probably does flow faster and maybe contributes to the issue of the low vacuum? It was also decked and had very likely been decked before when it was originally assembled (factory).
Def no leak, besides the massive hiss from the idle adjustment screw.
Ramp rates are indeed aggro and the actual duration is more than you find on a huge Evo cam.
It was the auto tranny.
^^^ I don't mind a slightly rough idle, I just don't want any CEL's! Hopefully there is some happy medium between misfire and idle too high CEL's. The higher idle and lower vacuum will make trouble-shooting more difficult however.
Can anyone confirm the stock idle adjustment? I'm not talking about fiddling with the screw either but the FSM mentions adjusting another screw to fix the idle.
Once the IAS is all the way out you can adjust the TAS and use a multimeter, engine management computer or just a multimeter to monitor the adjustments to the TAS. This might just confuse your PCM though. Make sure you note the original voltage at 0% TPS, or at least mark the screw so you can return it to the original position.
Anyone know a safe way to plug the hole I drilled in my throttle plate, now that I don't have the Twiggies anymore? Maybe a rivet?
Oh, and I really liked the big cams and setup I had, it was sooo responsive. The engine feels dull and lifeless in comparison now. But the cams were just too loud for my circumstances and aggravated other problems the car already has.