THE DIRTY LITTLE SECRETS ABOUT CAMSHAFT …(对凸轮轴的肮脏的小秘密u2026).pdf
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09/07
THE DIRTY LITTLE SECRETS ABOUT CAMSHAFT DESIGN
EVERY ENGINE BUILDER SHOULD KNOW
Jim Wolf
Valve motion is probably the least understood element of a successful performance engine.
Kinematics, fluid dynamics and metallurgy must all be mastered by any engineer that sets out to design a
successful valve motion profile for a high performance engine and ultimately translate this motion onto a
camshaft that will accurately produce the same motion at the valves. This is not always the level of
engineering you will get when choosing a camshaft for your engine.
Unfortunately there is a dirty little secret in cam design that is still practiced today by some
manufacturers that either “don’t know what they don’t know” or choose to ignore the learning curve
required to engineer a modern high performance camshaft. “Morphing” or master tweaking is when a cam
grinder takes an existing profile master (a large lobe shaped disc followed by a cam grinding machine) and
tweaks the grinding machine (including CNC grinders) causing it to stretch or distort the actual grinding
path of the master to achieve a “morphed” cam lobe and then builds a second master from the morphed
lobe. This is not cam design by any stretch of the imagination, yet many cam grinders unfortunately still use
morphing to develop new profiles! Hertzian contact stress, spring harmonics, maximum follower wear path
length, component mass and flex, and cam drive feed back are examples of just a few of the constraints
that cannot be directly address by morphing. Modern lobe design is no longer primarily done in the
displacement domain or physical shape of the lo
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