StanTheMan wrote:....
stick with your BP-4W head. your're not going turbo. less cam choices available . Ive also read when cams get too aggressive the VVT becomes unmanageable. I don't know the full truth there yet....
Once you increase lift and duration, you'll have to mechanically limit the amount of swing you have with the VVT - else you'll mash stuff together.
I know Gary Stewart has done that on a engines - I think it halves, from ~40* to ~20* variation, with 10 or 10.5mm lift cams. I can't remember what duration they were, the heads had a decent amount of work on them too. I'm rebuilding a vvt engine for a mate at the moment and unless we were going to put 20hours or more headwork into it, plus SUB, bigger springs etc etc, Gary said don't bother with bigger cams.
StanTheMan wrote:....
and no I don't believe that the VVT will maker up for aggressive cams. not even for a second.
You can also set your Cam sprockets so it becomes more drivable . But at the racetrack maybe retard the exit ( or both)a bit for extra scavenging . It will take all of 10 min for your prep.
Idle might go off a little but. but you can also have 2 maps for that purpose.
I'm looking at a more bang for your buck and considering the law of diminishing returns.
Considering Cams ($1000 ish), good cam gears ($500), some headwork to make the most of your fancy new cams (10-15hrs @ 100/hr), Springs ($500)... $3000ish*
That's before you've got it tuned... or considered the fact you're slapping the head on to a tired old bottom end, need to up the compression to make the most of the head work and cams. So you dial it back, get the smaller cams, only get the head essentially cleaned.
The vvt cams aren't much smaller than the 805s and I made about maybe 4-10 less peak HP than the 805c (actually, it was 805c and a vvt exhaust cam at the time as my 805c exhaust cam had a crack

), but the vvt engine definitely had more area under the curve. Lap times weren't noticeably different either once you factor in tyres, and the fact I only have the vvt engine for a month).
I'll see if I can find the old runs at Gary's when I am next there.
I would recommend new springs for a vvt engine if you did get one - 949 racing recommend it, Gary recommended it, and it's cheap insurance against spitting a shim. I think the set I put in a mate's head recently were about $300.
*all prices are ball park for new parts. Might get stuff cheaper... might not
StillIC wrote:....
Intake makes a big difference. I posted this a while ago now.
https://mx5cartalk.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=29&t=78696&p=956225#p956225I can't remember what the LCA is at the moment, but the less overlap will help with drivability. I think I have double the lift at TDC on the intake with the current cams than the 805c's, so 4mm vs ~2mm if I remember correctly. I generally shift between 7.2 and 7.5k. Only rev a bit for certain corners so I don't have to shift just before getting on the brakes. Current engine is about 11.8:1 (measured with every together). Cams are 10mm lift, 250* @ 50thou. It's one of the 2 mx5plus heads - Magpie has the other one. Even Gary thinks it's the best head he's seen with respect to craftmanship etc - although, his 2F heads flow more... and his engines make more power still

hamx5ter wrote:That said, GM's suggestion of a second hand ECU (the Haltech E11 for $450 on ebay) seems pretty attractive

It just comes to finding the tuner and dyno for the Haltech.
Seriously, better off just saving for longer and buying a modern ecu or even consider a megasquirt...
yes, heaps of people can still tune them, but you're running into problems even just getting the software to run on new computers.
hamx5ter wrote:For now, i'll get on with replacing the two control arm bushes that are pretty worn, get the engine compression tested, do some general reading on tuning and start looking for a reputable tuner.
No point spending money on a flogged bottom end. A mate did this circa 2012/13... After putting in another engine which was also a dud, he's now got a smokey (valve stem seals) vvt engine and we're rebuilding another on the side. If he wants more power after the refreshed engine goes in, we've agreed he should just get an 86.