The cam degreeing went surprisingly well, especially for a first time procedure. Before installing the slotted sprockets, I laid them over the OEM sprockets to see how the slots lined up on the holes. The slots were very nicely centered, so I installed them on the cams with the bolts in the middle of the slots (by eye, no precision measuring) to start with.
The exhaust cam was not too far out, my first lobe center reading was 103.5 degrees, which is only a bit retarded from the stock setting of 109 degrees. One adjustment and I got it perfect at 109deg. I figure the OEM timing must have been a bit retarded, but not really badly off the design numbers. It was definitely a low rpm setting, though.
The intake was another story. My first lobe center reading was 119 degrees! I know I may not have been perfectly lined up when I installed the slotted sprockets, but I KNOW I was not very far off. By the time I had it at the OEM timing of 110deg, I was almost out of slot in the one direction. So I am sure my OEM timing was WAY goofy on the intake side. Given that the 119degree timing is such a high rpm timing, I figure the thing never got to take off properly.
The good news is, it made 102rwhp and 69ft-lb torque in the OEM configuration. I am hoping for a very noticeable improvement now that both cams are properly set and working together. Do the racers out there have any guesses how much I should pick up with the cams sorted now?
Mark
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