Port window size has an effect on your operating rpm range as well as the cam. Its going to require you to turn more rpm's to get max power out of it and its also going to be lazy down low where a smaller port will not.
Please explain the Boss vs DZ article I posted, as the results are contrary to what you're stating here.
i have a set of SR's that are opened up somewhere between a max wedge and standard port. i have a 6900 chip in the msd box and i've hit it a few times and the motor was still in its stride. if i short shift it say 6500 or less the car really slowed down.
There is more to spinning RPM than a cylinder head. There are many details that are being neglected.
I'm using LS3 heads as an example, because I'm intimately familiar w/ them. They are larger than a std port victor head as cast from GM, yet a Victor is a 'race head' for a 440. They are approx 3.16 in2 at the opening and 3.39 in2 at the ssr. These go on 364 and 376 in3 engines that don't turn 10k RPM to make power. Hell, they're used in Escalades of all things.... For comparisons sake, a std port Vic is ~2.58 at the opening and 3.1 over the short turn.
I'm fairly confident the Gen3 Hemi ports are similar relative to the displacement they're feeding.
Street driven, mild 454s use Brodix Race Rites that have a min x-section of ~3.1 in2 out of the box w/ cams in the high 230s/low 240s w/ 10:1 and can knock down 550-575 hp.
It has to do w/ cam timing. As I've stated previously, you cannot use off the shelf cams and expect good results.
Anyone have any contrary examples we can analyze? I think I've provided a few in defense of my position.
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I could not agree more!!!
That is what I was trying to say before. Too much cylinder head is not going to help unless you have the rest of the combination ... cam, converter, and gear.
I'm pretty sure we all know it's about the 'combination', can you be more specific about just what goes w/ what?