Hi Ray, see later email on this, re the size of those differences. ; thanks for input! Maybe flow at .030 lift means more HP; those who do it, think so! And that matters. Racing is like chess, the psychology of what you do can distract / upset other guys, make you feel better about your new edge, and explain your win. Whether real or not, on this, the jury is out. Guy tightens his valves .020 because he listens to you, or watches you, loses power, burns them ! Yahoo! Back in the day, 392 in 57 Dodge, my friend had a 315?HP ~61 or 62 fuelie vette with 4;11; whenever we had a go, (many times!) I would scream out window “You gonna burn or bog” and he did ; big smile. Amoco gas, Sunoco 260, Atlas Bucrons, all that psych stuff…and some was very real (Bucrons) Like today’s 250$ conical air cleaners “worth 20 HP” (honest!) valve lash is in here somehere…! Jeesh, he has tight valves, more duration, at .0156 lift, I’m gonna lose, or why I lost…love it. JC Whitney “supercharger “ that fits under carburetor, magnets on fuel line, STP, VX-6 ,” top oil’ Fish carburetor----on it goes… Your buddy in Boston, likes your style, John From: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Friday, May 09, 2014 3:13 PM To: 'John Grady' jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [Chrysler300] Cc: Gary Nelson; bob marco Subject: Re: [Chrysler300] 300H valve adjustment Great write up John; However, there is a very real difference on how things work with tighter or looser clearances. If you are racing and want the most power, you want tighter. this allows for the biggest charge of fuel and the best scavenging of exhaust. Of course, this is in an engine you will be tearing down more frequently. If you never want to pull the heads again, looser is right, won't make a whole lot of difference on power, but, as you mentioned, will hold up longer. As the cam lobe comes around, the tappet is resting on the round part and as the ramp cones in contact with it, it starts to rise up. This is where the clearances come in. the tighter they are, the sooner the valve starts to open. The intake valve then stays open until the down side of the ramp comes in play, thus having the longest open time with more fuel being drawn in. The same thing happens on the exhaust valve with the larger clearance set for the higher heat on it. But still, having the longest open time for scavenging. Set looser, they, in both cases, have less time open and less power due to slightly less fuel to burn, and a little less open time to exhaust spent fuel. R ay in Mena with 4.5" of rain last night but no Tornadoes yet. Lots of destruction 150 miles east tho... On Fri, May 9, 2014 at 12:37 PM, 'John Grady' jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [Chrysler300] <Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: I have often wondered about this question, as an engineer ; if the lift at cam is .3 , a change of .003 on push rod side (.0045 at valve) is one part in 100, 1 %---- I have a very hard time believing it matters at all to anything, performance wise, .except one extremely critical thing . If in the excessive zeal to "get it perfect", you set it too tight , exhaust valve will not close tightly, (only when under high loads) which burns exhaust valve or seat, and down you go--- big time . Head gets trashed . The stem extends when hot ,why the exhaust setting is more, OEM . I went through this on an Onan generator with the equivalent of 1,000,000 miles (figured by hours) powering an isolated home, which lunched an exhaust valve badly on propane (no lead) ; the symptom at first was lost power, gradually reducing exhaust valve tappet clearance , which I thought was due to adjustment not holding (manifested as loss of power and compression), so I reset gap to factory (.017 cold) -three times,-- it had closed to like .012; I had rebuilt engine some years prior (rings) and obsessed about getting the tappet clearance EXACTLY RIGHT. Now it is on second (stellite) valve, I added .003 (,020 cold) on purpose to be sure valve closes. These are Onan numbers, not for Chrysler. Zero problems with this, last ten years. Sounds like racing cam guy had same thoughts as I did-loose far better ---by 1000X--- than tight. ; that Chrysler spec is a LOT of clearance , big number for "HOT" ---and then, what is hot? Exhaust valve stem at idle is ~ same temp as block, but really far hotter (????) at WOT , so setting it "hot" smacks of arbitrary BS, besides being a mess. While I cannot remember details right now, I remember setting up a slant six cold rather than hot with some added number I got somewhere. That number can be figured out approximately by taking highest temp exhaust valve can ever be (?1000F?) and length of valve stem times expansion rate of steel with temp ; I would expect all push rod V8's not that far apart either, on this--- particularly if you add .003 . See brand X or aftermarket cam cold settings. I do not understand how setting it hot at idle is more effective than setting cold, if you have cold number.both are building in or allowing for the expansion of exhaust valve stem when hot at WOT (.026?) , adding a little more gets you out of all danger, even from a cold setting..but we often do not have cold setting..but it is there , technically. As some engines only show cold setting! Measure it cold, on this, after and before setting it hot? Find out? Some will scream heresy at this, but as described ,this H already burned all the exhaust valves once. I really doubt unleaded is the reason..more likely valves were set too tight , someone going for perfection , (or used hot numbers cold) and mixture lean at WOT (which can happen on carbs with alcohol based fuels , need more fuel than real gas for given air flow --which really ought to be rejetted for) ; I have many cars on unleaded, have yet to encounter burned seats, except in alarmist magazine articles. . But I did destroy an exhaust valve over what must have been a too tight setting, leading to no cooling of exhaust valve( it cools edge by transferring heat into seat while tight on it (and by stem cooling) . By the way, the cylinder side of that totally burned valve was still perfect , plain cast iron. And lead problem was supposed to be about recession, or pounding into head, (which reduces tappet gap) ---not about burning. (or "pounding into head", for that matter..why or how would lead possibly change that?) With hydraulics, no impact at all to have receded valves, but might lead to burning with solids if it takes up safety gap when hot . So if you set it hot at idle, use Chrysler numbers, and do not worry if a little loose ,,,but never tight.might even set loose. You might measure cold first, before touching it , get that data for each valve, then do hot, also measure and write down hot before setting , you will know difference it changed due to idle temp--- within the .003 loose, to do it cold next time. Just not as critical to idle or performance as made out to be, when running along, IMHO..cannot be. But if you set it too tight while messing with it , you are toast. John PS agree 100% on distributors, they are in poor shape generally, after storage , advance gets locked up and / or sticky . Often diaphragm is bad which mity vac can find right away. From: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Friday, May 09, 2014 11:06 AM To: Listsaver 300 Club Cc: Gary Nelson Subject: [Chrysler300] 300H valve adjustment I have been working gradually towards getting my 300H running as well as I can. This forum has been a terrific help in many ways. A big step was the professional restoration/rebuild of both carbs, which followed the earlier massive and total restoration of the braking system, including installation of the correct double diaphragm booster. (Booster Dewey of Portland discovered that problem.) Recently, I had the distributor rebuilt which resolved my runaway idle adjust problem and is generally a great improvement. The next thing I am suspicious of is my valve settings. Unfortunately, the camshaft in the car is not the stock 300H camshaft, but instead is one which a well respected racing engine shop in Illinois installed in 1982 because of a fear that the engine would not be able to run on unleaded gasoline . (They were right in a way because a few years later I had to have hardened seats installed on the road.) It ostensibly lowers the compression ratio. The camshaft is a Barnes Racing Cams Design no 275 (I have the spec sheets for it) I do have a stock 300H camshaft which I eventually use to replace it, but not this summer. I had a well meaning friend stop by last year who was going to help me get it running right,. He managed to destroy all the old car linkages by bending them etc. and wanted to modify all sorts of things-in the process though, we got into a valve adjustment exercise one might and he was convinced the settings specified were wrong! So my next step is to set all the valve per the manufacturers specified valve lash. Chrysler 300H settings specified are .015 intake, .024 exh, set with engine running. Barnes F295 settings are .026 instake, .026 exh, set "hot" I have no idea what settings I have which is why I want to verify it. I suspect they may be stock 300H settings but the idle makes me think I have some hot valves. Question: I do not think I have ever set these valves hot with the engine running as specified in the shop manual. I suspect that makes an awful mess. Is it that important? If you have set the valves hot and running, I would like to hear how it went. Thanks, Mike Moore [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] -- Ray Jones. Y'all come on down an see us. Ya hear? 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