The head is out of a 87 Supra targa top. Rather large beast!
The work so far is on the Intake only.
Also, the work is on a floating pressure bench, not a constant state. Difference is, at low lift my bench has high vacuum and at high lift there is low vacuum.
My fault for the following flow figure mistake. I didn't have springs on the exhaust valves. This resulted in the valves being sucked off the seats, giving secondary flow path for air. It my have been only 0.1mm, but a leak is still a leak. It has skewed the results for the STOCK figure only. All numbers are in CFM (Cubic Feet per Minute)
STOCK INTAKE...................PORTED INTAKE
2mm.......89....................75
2.5mm.....98...................87
3mm.......111..................110
3.5mm.....117..................130
4.0mm.....124..................140
4.5mm.....130..................155
5.0mm.....142..................162.5
5.5mm.....163..................170.5
6.0mm.....167..................183
6.5mm.....174..................188
7.0mm.....177..................196
7.5mm.....188..................201.5..........Stock cam peak lift point
8.0mm.....195..................204
8.5mm.....200..................206
9.0mm.....203..................207
9.5mm.....205..................209
10.0mm....207..................210
As can be seen in the lower lift points, the exhaust valve opening has altered the results.
Effectively, I have filled the floor of the port, straightened a wall, removed material from the valve guides and performed de-shrouding in the combustion chamber.
The port modification I have made is best explained like this
Stock Port Opening Size........... 2.616Inch2
Modified Port Opening Size....... 2.093Inch2
The ports have been filled a great deal using Devcon Metal Putty. Its a 2 pak metal filler
What has me wondering as to what this work will do when the engine is built and run in. It is to my understanding that airspeed is torque. The flow number is about power potential.
Stock air speed @ 7mm............162FPM (Feet Per Minute)
Modified air speed @ 7mm........225FPM
Not only has shrinking the port size increased total airflow, but airspeed has risen sharply.
Only time will tell when the supra is strapped to a dyno will this modification show its true worth in a turbo application.
Thought this would be an interesting read for the Gearheads on Toyspeed.