High MAP reading at Idle????
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High MAP reading at Idle????
88' F-150 DD, 5.0, cammed, ported, polished, 4:10's, built AOD, 33's
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Matt Cramer
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Re: High MAP reading at Idle????
Re: High MAP reading at Idle????
88' F-150 DD, 5.0, cammed, ported, polished, 4:10's, built AOD, 33's
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Matt Cramer
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Re: High MAP reading at Idle????
But that's getting a bit off the subject. Maybe you could post a data log of your MAP readings along with your MSQ? That might shed a bit more light on things.
Re: High MAP reading at Idle????
88' F-150 DD, 5.0, cammed, ported, polished, 4:10's, built AOD, 33's
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HomeBlown57
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Re: High MAP reading at Idle????
Doin' my part to help!
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Six_Shooter
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Re: High MAP reading at Idle????
Do this:
Install the cam at your "o*/in phase", now spin the crank 360*, the cam will now be 180* from where it started, continue to turn the crank another 360* and the cam will be another 180* and back at it's original position.
You can also do this:
Install the cam "180* out", then spin the crank 360* and the cam is now at your "0*."
The only effect an improperly time cam will have is if the timing chain has stretched a huge amount, or the cam was just plainly installed without paying attention to the timing marks.
Re: High MAP reading at Idle????
88' F-150 DD, 5.0, cammed, ported, polished, 4:10's, built AOD, 33's
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kjones6039
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Re: High MAP reading at Idle????
Here I go sticking my big nose in where it's probably not wanted..........MidNite88 wrote:No matter how many times you rotate the engine over, the cam will be 180 out. the cam has to be straight up with #1 piston TDC. Hence why you use a degree wheel to set cam timing, you have to be sure #1 is perfectly TDC. If the cam is 180 out, then it changes the firing order completely, then the power pulses land on the crank at the wrong time throwing the whole engine out of balance making less power, hurting bearings, throwing off vacuum signal, no response, low torque output and generaly poor running. Also, if you drop the distributor with a cam 180 out and #1 TDC, it will run but very very poorly. As in the case of this car. Now that the cam is correct, car runs pretty good, but it ran 180 out so long it built carbon up on the intake valves and now it needs a valve job. But the guy who owns the car doesnt want to put out the money for it.
The '180 degree's out' notion is simply not correct. If the cam is installed with both timing marks (cam & crank) aligned with the cam & crank center line then they will be in the proper relationship. How many times you rotate the crankshaft has no bearing on that relationship. That is why the cam and crank sprockets have those timing marks stamped into them.
The use of a degree wheel is generally intended to make fine (and accurate) adjustments to cam timing via offset crank/cam keys and has nothing to do with initial camshaft installation.
Now, having said that, wrong cam timing, (one or maybe 2 teeth off or a stretched chain) certainly will profoundly affect performance! Much more than that and the engine will probably not run at all. (some of the reason I use gears instead of chain)
Nothing is going to change the firing order, period. It has always been, 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2 for SBC's since 1955.
Matt has it right. Chain slop will most likely cause timing (and performance) problems.
The idea of a camshaft being installed 180* out causing carbon buildup is equally without merit. I have been building engines for ~50 years and have never heard of or seen such a thing.
Ok, I’ll get off my soap box.
Ken
MS2 v3 w/ms2extra 3.4.0 Release
36-1, Delphi LS2/7 coils in wasted spark, driven by v2.0 logic board from JBPerformance
Spartan Lambda Sensor from 14point7
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DonTZ125
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Re: High MAP reading at Idle????
With the engines I'm used to, it causes shrapnel build-up, not carbon. On a non-interference engine, I'd think the unburned fuel would wash away the carbon ...kjones6039 wrote:The idea of a camshaft being installed 180* out causing carbon buildup is equally without merit.
Ken
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drholl
Re: High MAP reading at Idle????
Or the timing gear was put on backwards, if there's mark on the other side.
My 2 cents worth.
Good luck
Holl

