Thu May 03, 2012 7:22 am by fordman
By chance are the limits we can have going to be pushed any? For example, the current revision of my engine (a 192 cubic inch naturally apirated I4 with an air filter, a catalytic converter, and mufflers) is making 613 horsepower. And I'm happy about that, but when you look at the statistics it's fully obvious that it could be much better. It has the full bore, full stroke, full cam profile, fully retart valve timing, richest AF mixture, fully advanced ignition timing, 12,000 RPM redline, and uses 100 octane fuel. It's at 14.6:1 compression, but if I go to 14.7 it will detonate. If I lower any of these extremes, I lose power, so that means that I don't have room to get the full potential and best balance of all the factors out of my engine. I've found that retart ignition timing to raise compression lowers power, so I would like to advance timing more and lower the compression more, or just use higher octane fuel altogether. I figure in reality if I go out to my van and turn the distributor cap all the way, I can advance it as much as I want, until it not only loses power, but sputters and backfires and just won't start, so why not factor that into the game? Let us richen the engine until it floods, retart the valve timing until practically no air enters the engine at idle (and maybe even let us set a high idle to counter it), let us run a big enough cam that the valves will hit the pistons, let us run high enough RPM to blow up even the stoutest, least powerful engine we can build, and let us raise the compression to, say, 20:1! Why not? I think there should be more risk, and more room to improve. By the way, how big can the bore and stroke get on the V8s in the actual game? I would love to build a 632 big block (4.6" bore, 4.75" stroke).