I wanted to thank Mike Rieck and Rick Stetson for the recent work on this head. Mike especially deserves a lot of credit for putting up with me on this one. He completely reworked a chamber damaged vintage Butch Pace ported early K head several years ago. Jim French did the chamber weld repairs. It was gorgeous when done. It was kept old school, new guides, 33.5/28 SS valves, fresh double springs, new titanium retainers.
http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php?topic=158036.0I had it on the shelf for a while and my mind started wondering about the possibility of intake valves bigger than 34 in a k head.
http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php/topic,175280.0.htmlSo, after some consultation(should have been with a shrink🙄), I asked Mike if he was willing to cut back into that lovely work and see if we (read Mike/Rick) could make 35/28 valves fit.
So we used Ferrea Superflow 6.5mm stem Mitsubishi EVO 8/9 35mm intake valves(credit Bear from Australia who used them in his 410 heads) which are just long enough to be able to cut the length down to size and recut keeper grooves. Basically consider them valve blanks.
Both valves needed to be sunk farther for v/v clearance and a bit more since I wanted freedom to install a .430” lift cam. Sinking valves farther creates ever increasing valve to chamber shrouding.
So each chamber was carefully milled with a 20 degree cut from the 71mm bore in. This is to match the 20 degree dome at the perimeter on vintage 12.5:1 MTC/Venolia/Arias/RC Engineering etc pistons.
By cutting that taper, and matching it to the piston crown, it allows several things.
1-a good amount of accurate squish area(aimed toward the spark plug)
2-a decent theoretical chamber shape.
3-far less valve shrouding than would otherwise be necessary
CycleX high lift cast iron valve guides and CycleX 6.5mm beehive spring and retainer conversion was used along with new CycleX K type keepers. New hardened stem caps were used too. The recessed pockets on the head casting had to be clearance down to allow the tall (.430”) cam lobes to clear the space. None of this is new news to some, the tapered chamber/domed piston concept has been used many times by racers in all the 2V headed sohc/dohc bikes in the 70s-80s. But I thought some here would appreciate Mike and Ricks work. Rob Muzzy would be proud. Keep in mind this is only a useful concept if high compression is desired AND good squish area. Street compression pistons could work but will reduce squish area some(or completely depending on shape)
George