So lets take, for example
a fresh build motor: 73mm bore, carrillo rods, 12.5:1 compression lightweight pistons(190 gram bare per piston), reworked RC ported head, 327 cammed motor, stock stroke.
1060cc.
Frankie runs something similar and has the shift light set at 10,000rpm, shifting at +/- 10,200 max ideally and has the high side Rev limiter set at 11,000 to handle missed shifts. He is running RC steel rods and heavy 245 gram (bare weight) vintage MTC 72mm pistons. He has reported no problems with valve float or bounce control at 11,000 with conventional double spring type APE springs and I'm guessing titanium retainers (?). He has QUITE a few years with this setup without issues.
The 73mm motor would have pistons that weight a full 55 grams less per piston, and rods more than 25% lighter. Same 327 cam. Head flowing ability should up even or better. His power is dropping off at about 10,000rpm.
If starting from scratch, would Cycle X beehive springs be a worthy investment for added piece of mind at the 11,000rpm zone, or are conventional springs with titanium retainers sufficient?
Beehive springs have, on paper anyway, several potential benefits. Significantly lighter overall spring/retainer weight, virtually no resonance potential since each wind of the spring is a different diameter, spreading the harmonics out. Lighter overall spring pressure is required for the beehive springs, so along with the lughter weight, potentially less wear on valves/guides, rocker, and cam lobes. And testing has supported the idea that the lighter beehive spring/retainers and lower seat pressures tend to allow a modestly extended rpm range past where conventional springs start to give up, assuming the conventional springs are starting to loose precise control of the valve action.
This is all theory to me, no practical experience. Beehive springs are certainly the more expensive option, but at what point are they worth it, considering the three main potential benefits:
1 Potential added high rpm safety factor from valve float/bounce (a rev limiter is a given here BTW)
2 Potential for extending the power band up a few hundred rpm or so for added performance.
3 Potential for reduced stress and wear on the rest on the valvetrain.
So who has an opinion on this?
George