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Let's assume an engine runs fine and does not detonate. It has closed chamber heads but the head gaskets are thick so it has no realistic quench.
Then a piston swap is done where the new slugs are dished on one side and at zero deck on the other. Now it has quench yet the compression ratio is similar.
The heads are the same, the cam is the same but now there is Squish-Quench.
Aside from additional detonation resistance, is there a power increase? Is quench more for reduced emissions and mileage?
This isn't hypothetical. I'm doing something similar to my 440-495 though I am using a bigger cam than before.
Then a piston swap is done where the new slugs are dished on one side and at zero deck on the other. Now it has quench yet the compression ratio is similar.
The heads are the same, the cam is the same but now there is Squish-Quench.
Aside from additional detonation resistance, is there a power increase? Is quench more for reduced emissions and mileage?
This isn't hypothetical. I'm doing something similar to my 440-495 though I am using a bigger cam than before.