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-   -   What to look for when picking a CAM (https://www.offshoreonly.com/forums/general-q/330818-what-look-when-picking-cam.html)

turbom700 09-16-2015 04:09 PM

What to look for when picking a CAM
 
In the marine world is there rule(s) of things not do when picking a cam, like dont go over x LSA or x amount of lift.

Reason I'm asking is I'm building a LS motor for a pontoon :party-smiley-004: and a simple cam swap will gain one almost a 100hp up top.

For instance stock cam
Lift 0.466/0.457
Duration 190/191 degrees
LSA 116 degrees
Idle vacuum 22.5 in-Hg
Cranking compression 175 psi
Peak power 353 at 5,200 rpm
Peak torque 384 at 4,300 rpm
Average HP 286 Average TQ 353

A readly availble aftermarket cam
Lift 0.590
Duration 224/232 degrees
LSA 115 degrees
Idle vacuum 17.8 in-Hg
Cranking compression 176 psi
Peak power 442 at 6,200 rpm
Peak torque 412 at 5,000 rpm
Average HP 315
Average TQ 380
TQ gains (over LM7 cam) at 2,500 -25 lb-ft
3,500 -8 lb-ft
4,500 +16 lb-ft
5,500 +69 lb-ft (72 hp)
6,500 +105 lb-ft (130 hp)

Is this aftermarket cam to big? Will I have revision issues.

Thanks
Mike

maddad 09-16-2015 05:05 PM

I'm no expert, but I'd like to know how a cam that closes the intake valve later in the cycle and has more overlap with exhaust events can make more compression than one that closes it sooner.

SB 09-16-2015 05:10 PM

Faster cranking rpm.Believe it. Difference between fresh battery, low battery, faster spinnig starter, lower spinning starter, etc, can effect that greatly.

Psst: Circle track restricted rules: I used to reduce voltage to the starter , to crank it slower, when being teched for cranking compression. LOL.

Cranking compression was a dumb rule because way to many things effect it.

Okay, back to boats ! LOL.

Unlimited jd 09-16-2015 05:33 PM

I don't see that cam making the boat any faster. It just moves the rpm range up, you'll have to switch a smaller prop, rev the hell out of it all the time and hope it still gets on plane well

turbom700 09-16-2015 05:38 PM

Hmmm I'm not following. Care to explain that. More rpm will allow me to spin the prop faster at high rpm(kinda of what everyone wants todo)

FYI boat planes with a 140hp at 21mph. Won't have a problem with planing.

SB 09-16-2015 05:49 PM

Give us some other choices.

turbom700 09-16-2015 06:11 PM

Here is where I have been getting some of my info. There is 1000 cam for the LS but they were testing the popular ones.

http://www.hotrod.com/how-to/engine/...st-comparison/

Unlimited jd 09-16-2015 06:26 PM

If you dyno an engine with that cam it's not going to make anymore over than what you have, until it gets above the rpm the stock one peaked at.

turbom700 09-16-2015 06:43 PM

Correct but when the stock cam falls off at 5500 Rpms and this one pulls to 6500rpms and 80hp more that will push the boat faster thru the water. What we all want todo.

Im more worried about idle, revision, things like that. After all this boat will spend 80% of its life below 1800 Rpms cruising around with a adult beverage in my hand.

Baja Rooster 09-16-2015 06:57 PM


Originally Posted by turbom700 (Post 4355459)
Hmmm I'm not following. Care to explain that. More rpm will allow me to spin the prop faster at high rpm(kinda of what everyone wants todo)

FYI boat planes with a 140hp at 21mph. Won't have a problem with planing.

An engine is good for X amount of power, and the cam more or less decides where that is delivered. You can optimize torque on the lower range or trade that for horsepower via revs up top. The problem develops when you don't have enough torque to get the boat moving enough to utilize the HP on the top end.


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