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Old 05-04-2017 | 02:29 PM
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I'll comment on this as a valvetrain engineer with some racing experience:

Valve spring temperature is driven by friction between inner and outer coils, or friction between the coils and spring dampers.

Testing at one of my former employers, a NASCAR team, revealed that the temperature of the oil introduced via the sprayers in the valve covers had little effect on the spring temperatures. The important thing was having oil present to carry the heat away.

My recommendation is that a marine application use beehive springs rather than dual springs. The speeds run on marine performance engines generally don't warrant a dual spring. Since beehive springs don't rely on friction for damping, they generate much less heat, and can free up some horsepower.

If anyone is interested in an engineering analysis of their valvegear, I'd be glad to talk about your particular application.
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Old 05-04-2017 | 04:06 PM
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Originally Posted by JRider
Never thought of the valve spring temps, in fact I had no clue that spring pressure dropped off with heat. I would have thought it would have to be extreme heat.
We test spring pressure on a bench at room temperature. What about when the spring is at 180 deg, 200, 240, 300, etc?

I have no idea how hot our actual valvesprings really get in a marine application, but , it would be interesting to see. I would imaging though, that spraying 240* oil on them for 15 minutes, vs spraying 180* oil on them, has to have some kind of effect on their temperatures. I cant see a spring running cooler than 240*, when your spraying 240 * oil on them.
Attached Thumbnails Good oil thermostats??-screenshot-141-.png   Good oil thermostats??-screenshot-188-.png  

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Old 05-04-2017 | 05:11 PM
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300° spring temperatures aren't an issue. I should call Peterson Spring and ask what this chart is trying to claim. Maybe I'll learn something.

Last edited by NautiSouth; 05-04-2017 at 05:14 PM.
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Old 05-04-2017 | 05:24 PM
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Originally Posted by NautiSouth
300° spring temperatures aren't an issue. I should call Peterson Spring and ask what this chart is trying to claim. Maybe I'll learn something.
I think if you talk to Chris there, youll find hes a big fan of keeping ghe springs as cool as possible.

Ive never seen anyone running beehives on a bbc marine engine thats making any kind of serious power. Id imagine what if any power gain they offer, would be trumped by whether or not they can go the distance , keep things stable, etc. That being said, seems like conical springs have come a long way .

Cam guy at comp tried talking my buddy into conicals for his 502 builds that will be 6000rpm max. He asked my opinion, and all i had for him was "do you wanna go with whats been working for many years, or do you wanna try new things and see how they work out" . He went with some isky dual springs.
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Old 05-04-2017 | 06:21 PM
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Damn won't let me edit above.

Oil cools the springs...it doesn't really heat them. So, the higher the oil temp the higher the spring temp.

Springs will glow red very quickly without any oil cooling them.

I think Peterson has a video on this too.

Last edited by SB; 05-04-2017 at 06:24 PM.
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Old 05-04-2017 | 07:09 PM
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Originally Posted by SB
Damn won't let me edit above.

Oil cools the springs...it doesn't really heat them. So, the higher the oil temp the higher the spring temp.

Springs will glow red very quickly without any oil cooling them.

I think Peterson has a video on this too.
This is true with dual springs or springs with dampers. Single springs without dampers don't generate heat.
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Old 05-04-2017 | 07:40 PM
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ooops. did not read your post top of the page. Only beehives used on OSO and most other sites are on some small blocks.....so I was assuming typical dual spring set up.
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Old 05-04-2017 | 08:54 PM
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Springs lose Very little appreciable pressure due to heat , ( on the order of 1% or less ) . Springs generate large amounts of heat regardless of the design , the constant twisting of the metal generates the heat , ( think about twisting wire until it fails , it gets hot ) . Valvetrains generate a large amount of heat .
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Old 05-05-2017 | 04:43 AM
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Originally Posted by dunnitagain
Springs lose Very little appreciable pressure due to heat , ( on the order of 1% or less ) . Springs generate large amounts of heat regardless of the design , the constant twisting of the metal generates the heat , ( think about twisting wire until it fails , it gets hot ) . Valvetrains generate a large amount of heat .
The analogy used here is not correct. When twisting a wire until failure, the wire is being plastically deformed. Plastic deformation creates heat. Valvesprings are deformed elastically, and elastic deformation is very efficient with nearly no energy lost as heat.

Some valvesprings have dampers or interference fit dual coils to damp surge energy. It's the two coils of wire rubbing against one another that creates heat, not the coils of wire themselves.

Beehive springs are designed to damp surge without the use of friction dampers, and have the benefit of using a much lighter retainer. That's why I prefer to use them when I can.
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Old 05-05-2017 | 09:56 AM
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Originally Posted by NautiSouth
I'll comment on this as a valvetrain engineer with some racing experience:

Valve spring temperature is driven by friction between inner and outer coils, or friction between the coils and spring dampers.

Testing at one of my former employers, a NASCAR team, revealed that the temperature of the oil introduced via the sprayers in the valve covers had little effect on the spring temperatures. The important thing was having oil present to carry the heat away.

My recommendation is that a marine application use beehive springs rather than dual springs. The speeds run on marine performance engines generally don't warrant a dual spring. Since beehive springs don't rely on friction for damping, they generate much less heat, and can free up some horsepower.

If anyone is interested in an engineering analysis of their valvegear, I'd be glad to talk about your particular application.

First off, thanks for posting as experts usually tire quickly of internet forums. There does seems to be a bit of evidence that the beehives in higher lift (ie Crane HR series) big block applications (heavy valve trains) were having a bit of a tough time. I believe it was Rayler who was finding this out first hand. Also when gathering parts for my project, the tech at PAC advised against going with the beehives in my application. It is easy to see that a beehive would have some inherent advantages or they wouldn't be so prolific in the OEM performance applications, but maybe for higher lift, BBC applications they may not be the best. Any comments?
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