Highest HP/L

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There is no replacement for displacement.

Yep, I'm not that technically minded, and I know this one! :D

For example, out of these two cars, which is the faster. Both are V8, have comparable power-to-weight ratios, BHP, and weight. One is noticeably faster than the other, but which one?

RM'd Corvette CO6 with 564bhp and 1090kg

or

Yellow-hat GT-R with 581bhp and 1100kg

The answer is the Corvette, because it's displacement of 6997cc is bigger than the Yellow-hat's 4494cc. Which in turn helps the Corvette to produce 70kgfm of torque, which is more than the GT-R can produce, even though it has more BHP. 👍
 
Around here,c ars are taxes based on their displacement (and a few other aspects, that aren't important right now). Therefore, HP per litre starts to equal HP per money. Seems reasonable to care about it, no?
 
Torque is the real number anyway, HP is just a calculated figure. (though it's an important # once you bring gearing into the conversation) But what do you mean about it not delivering?


This ^^^ V8 torque ftw!!
 
NOS Waster, you're very welcome. :) Glad to be able to, and also appreciate that you posted it as well. :) BTW, re-reading my post, I meant it to say that the LS7 is basically the same (external) size and weight as the LS1, not the S14 engine. I see now how it could be interpreted either way, depending on how one reads it.


Civic, are you for real? OHV refers to cam in block, as compared to OHC, where cam is in the head. It does not mean that one has valves in a different location.

Seriously, don't try acting like a smart ass if you don't really know what you're talking about.

(and btw, Ford Flathead V8s do not have the valve over top of the cylinder)


On the subject of efficiency and part plurality, OHV struggles with high RPMs because it has more moving parts in the valvetrain. I keep telling you: we're not talking about black and white, here.

It seems to me that now the goal is to simply tell me I'm wrong. lol Well... I'm not, and I won't let it go uncontested. ;)

So, onward......

High rpms are not a good thing in most applications. They are more costly to achieve, and reduce overal engine life. The only reason for them is when you are otherwise limited such as displacement restrictions in racing.

Case in point - can you think of a situation where power mattered absolutely, there were NO "rules" of any kind, and yet rpms were not sought out?

Air combat.

When designers needed to give an edge to their respective air forces, they did so with power. When doing so, they tweaked various areas of efficiency, or ultimately increased displacement. However, they never spun them fast.

You pretty much won't find any prop fighter spinning their engines more than 3000~3500rpm. Yet they make 3000+hp by wars end. This means monstrous amounts of torque. More horsepower could be had easily by spinning them faster. Particularly in the P-47 as it was built around a turbocharger (meaning that it wouldn't run out of breath at higher rpms). But they didn't do it.

The simple reason is reliability. As important as HP was to performance, engine life and maintenance and reliability were every bit as important. Literally life or death.

No other example brings that combination together - of power AND reliability both being literally life or death, and no rules body dictating displacement or rpm or induction limits, and yet... they still spun them slowly.


However, in regards to your notion that you can't spin OHV fast, both NASCAR and the LSx engines prove that notion false. There were even engines in the 60 spinning up to 7K -with flat tappets!

Point is, they don't need to. And, a smart engineer won't do it just to do it. There are better ways to achieve the power.


On the subject of weight, less of it is always good, but the engine isn't the whole car. To address that very argument ("OHV engines are better because they're lighter") I like a little thought experiment I've used before: Take a 3000lbs. car, equal in every way, but with two engine choices; a 5.0L OHV engine, and a 5.0L DOHC engine. The OHV engine weighs 200lbs. and makes 300hp. The DOHC engine has a significant weight disadvantage, weighing over twice as much -- 500lbs. -- but manages 100hp/L, making 500hp.

You've now got a 3200lbs. car with 300hp, and a 3500lbs. car with 500hp. Which is faster? We're dealing with hypotheticals here, so a simple power-to-weight ratio will do. ;)

This demonstrates nothing but an ability to carefuly manufacture a hypothetical example to try to support your stance. There is no reason that one engine would be so lazy compared to the other. The valvetrain design certainly is NOT it.

Nor does your example get into issues of having all that weight high up, just under the hood, nor the amount of bulk required to do something like that in aluminum, and the associated design issues and compromises that go along with that.


On the subject of complicated timing arrangements, I've read variable valve timing with OHV is not easy (ie. complicated). Although it's been done over at GM, their system can't withstand hard driving, and is pretty much limited to SUVs and automatic transmissions (auto because engine RPM with a manual is too "unpredictable"). Another disadvantage-for-an-advantage. It should start becoming clear why cars aren't all OHV or all OHC.

Yes, you touched on it later in your post - tax on displacement. It's not quite FIA limitations, but it's close. Secondary to that is public perception. Look at this thread alone. People assume that big cube means heavy, old, low power, low tech, and gas guzzling. Absolutely NONE of which is true, but it's the perception. Unless your market wants big engines (Corvette, Viper, F-Body, etc), why would you try to use one? (remember, sales trumps engineering - always)


The whole "bulk of package" advantage makes LSx engines and other OHVs a convenient choice for engine swaps, but that's about it; an engine is always designed or carefully selected for its application. Hell, BMW still uses DOHC inline-6s in their smallest car. And for center of gravity concerns, I'd personally take a boxer engine over any V.

Even when you design a chassis around an engine, the smaller the engine, the more freedom the chassis designer has, and the fewer compromises they will be forced to make.

However, in most cases, the engine is NOT designed for the application, rather the other way around (as I said above). The LSA was not designed for the CTS. The LS1 was not designed for the 4th Gen F-Body, the LS3 was not designed for the Monaro/GTO, etc. And the series (both Gen III and IV) are present in various forms and materials (like iron) in many, many more applications. By virtue of it's small size and lightweight, it's incredibly useful across a wide range of applications, always with good power to weight for both efficiency and performance, as well as low CG for same.

Yes, a boxer is even better in that last regard. But that has other drawbacks as well. Everything is a compromise.


Actually, I6s are quite rare today;

"today". My point was that when you start with something, you get a rep for it and you keep it. Even when going from DOHC I4, you keep DOHC with V6. It wouldn't be smart not to in those cases, however, it's all about marketing.


The real reason you don't see OHV on imports is because other countries tax cars based on displacement. And SOHC/DOHC will perform better (in terms of horsepower) given a certain displacement. This is one place where hp/L truly matters.

Old vs new vs public perception. Same thing, differnt look. You don't NEED DOHC for power in small sizes. There are many other ways to achieve that goal without increasing displacement.

However, taxing on displacement is case in point for my argument above. The perceptions run so strong and so deep, that gov't will tax people for it, which in turn, cycles back around and furthers these false assumptions.

You know, my WS6 gets 27mpg on the highway, yet puts down 300hp/330ftlbs at the rear wheels, bone stock. Clarkson got 45 in a Prius - a car that's sole reason for existance and claim to fame is about ultimate fuel economy. So much for the theory that more displacement inhernetly means more fuel consumption (see next paragraph for more). (we have a gas guzzler tax too, and the Z06 got away without having to pay it too)

And, the greatest thing is, my car was made to be a performance car, not a fuel miser. It has huge 275/40ZR17s on all 4 corners, it's packed with amenities, and while aerodynamically clean, not to the extent that a prius is. It also weighs 3500lbs thanks to never ending stupid safety regulations and a desire for chassis strength. YET.... it was also meant to be cheap too. So not much effort was put into it from a design standpoint, not like a Corvette or Ferrari anyway. A different PCM tune, more power with steeper gears, weight reduction, DoD, DI, lower ride height, flat underside.... the list goes on of stuff that could be added to make my sports car quite fuel efficient, despite it's "big V8".


I understand you're not a fan of NASCAR (neither am I), but the engines they use are smaller than the LS7. And obviously designed for a very different set of conditions.

Only difference is bore x stroke. And it's still a 5.7 in NASCAR. Remember, the LS1 had it's block tweaked into the LS6, and from there, a slight redesign lead to the LS3, which was 6.2L, but for all practical intents and purposes, still basically an LS6 (which is basically an LS1). The 7, in simply a bored and stoked LS3. This is why these engines all take up the same space and weigh the same, dispite the displacement ranging from 346ci to 427ci.

The real difference between NASCAR and LSx's is money. Just like F1 engines cost $$$$$$ and don't last very long, the same is true for NASCAR. LSx's are street engines that have to fit a bottom line and be reliable for at least 100,000 miles, under most driving condtions an owner would put it through.


People also love to point out when DOHC engines make the same power as larger OHV engines. Why not put DOHC on the larger engine too? We've all seen DOHC on a 2.0, throw DOHC on a 5.0 and see what you get.

Spoiler: Europe has known the answer for years (in expensive cars, yes, but expensive for a variety of reasons beyond engine tech), but Ford is now finding out for themselves.

It's not DOHC that does that.

Also, do not equate peak power output with real world usability and livability. As well, you simply can not ignore everything else (design/manufacture cost, bulk, weight, reliability, CG, etc). But that is what you are doing in the name of placing DOHC at the top.

Bear this in mind. I'm not saying that DOHC is worthless. I AM saying that we aren't running F1 cars at their peak all the time, and in the real world, on road cars, there IS a better way to go about it. But mostly, I'm showing people that large engines with OHV valvetrains actually DO have advantages and good points. Which is why I'm forced to reply to every single one of your posts, because you are trying to undo this (and are also trying to suggest I'm wrong when I'm not). It's this very mentality (which I'm attempting to address) that lead to the comments that set me off in the first place.


Fair enough. But if you're going to complain about assumptions like those, it's not fair for you to turn around and assume OHC = inefficient, too much weight, needless complexity, and too bulky.

Yes it is. For the street in a street car. Absolutely. (in the absence of special parematers and restrictions, like taxes, mistaken public mindset, etc - speaking purely from an engineering and peformance standpoint, bearing in mind the total street car life/usage)


I understand how Ecchi-BANZAII!! (c'mon, if you're going to be rudely obvious, we have names here) could have irked you with his post. But your comments have been just as needlessly dismissive as his was. Each form of valve control has its advantages, disadvantages, and appropriate applications. One happens to favor high-RPM power, another happens to favor low-RPM torque and response, and the other (SOHC) sits somewhere in the middle. That's all.

'cept I have not been assumptive or dismissive at all. If anything, I could say that you have been in this attempt to place DOHC back at the top at any cost. You're ignoring or dismissing most real world factors in the name of this struggle. Which is why I'm forced to slog it out in such a lengthy way that people often hate to read.


As for your final comments, we'll have to agree to disagree. But I hope you can see how hp/L might matter to someone who lives where displacement is taxed.

Again, you don't seek HP/l, you seek HP. getting 200 hp/l out of a 1L is NOT better than getting 100 hp/l out of a 3L engine. I'm using numbers that are easy to see purely for the sake of example. There will be a range of disp sizes under the tax threshold, and going smaller and trying to wind it up more is not advantageous at all. But it makes for better ricer math. And thus, in the end, that's all it is. Nobody really uses it for anything other than trying to brag, and it's almost always the guys with the little engines that do it (compensation syndrome on their part maybe? lol! :D ).
 
I understand completely how an engine works, its just the fact that both engines have overhead valves and he is comparing the position of valves to position of camshaft. I see where you're coming from though I've not once heard it called an OHV though while refering to the position of the camshaft. Either way, I was pretty much just wondering for the sake of buying cars with small engines pushing large power.


BTW. ESCUDO!

2.5L inline 4 with 1000+ hp.
 
I gonna stay on topic here and avoid this derailing arguement.

If you are having a discussion about HP per liter it ALWAYS refers to engines without any form of boost, so only naturally aspirated engines.


Carry on.
 
I've not once heard it called an OHV though while refering to the position of the camshaft.

And this is my point. You attack me and act like you have superior knowledge, yet haven't heard something so basic.

Yes, push-rods and OHC both have valves over top of the cylnder, that is a given. And because it is a given, people who really know what they are talking about use OHV as shorthand to mean pushrods as opposed to OHC (3 letters, acronym, quick and easy to type, etc).

Also, you commented that any valve in the head is "overhead" - it's not. Study up on the Ford Flathead V8 to see. However, you simply challenged people to name engines that did not have valves on top, and the rotary is a legit answer, as is 2 stroke engines. (and if I wanted to get technical and be a smartass, I'd also add turbines, both centrifugal and axial flow, as they are internal combustion engines, and totally valve-less (as are pulse jets and RAM-jets) ;) )


BTW - I +1 your question to grog, there's no reason to ignore FI (in your original context), I'm not sure what he's talking about.
 
Here's a few interesting ones.

My fully tuned Cappucino - 204BHP/L, 134bhp from a 658cc engine.
Fully Tuned Evo IX - 251BHP/L, 502 BHP from a 1997cc engine.
PD Kart - 330BHP/L, 33 bhp from a 100cc engine.

Lol, that's SO low...

I race scooters, we get just over 30HP out of an 70cc engine without a 10HP shot of NOS. My fastest time was 5,9 sec./150m. Grid start. Including reaction time.
 
And this is my point. You attack me and act like you have superior knowledge, yet haven't heard something so basic.

Yes, push-rods and OHC both have valves over top of the cylnder, that is a given. And because it is a given, people who really know what they are talking about use OHV as shorthand to mean pushrods as opposed to OHC (3 letters, acronym, quick and easy to type, etc).

Also, you commented that any valve in the head is "overhead" - it's not. Study up on the Ford Flathead V8 to see. However, you simply challenged people to name engines that did not have valves on top, and the rotary is a legit answer, as is 2 stroke engines. (and if I wanted to get technical and be a smartass, I'd also add turbines, both centrifugal and axial flow, as they are internal combustion engines, and totally valve-less (as are pulse jets and RAM-jets) ;) )


BTW - I +1 your question to grog, there's no reason to ignore FI (in your original context), I'm not sure what he's talking about.


I know about the flathead V8 having the head on the side, I have designed and machined a 2 cylinder 180* Opposed engine that runs on compressed air at 1000+ rpms so me not knowing how **** works has nothing to do with it, its just that OHV and OHC engines both have valves in the cylinder head and therefore ohc engines have ohv's.

I know what you're talking about though anyways.
 
Either way, HP/L does matter. It shows how capable an engine with small displacement can be. I just want to see what cars are out there that have the best HP/L so I can buy them.

Maximum HP/L actually means nothing. A more useful metric is which engine has the highest average hp per liter. Simply because "peak" hp is a rather useless statistic, especially when considering engines that will only be at that power peak exactly once in any gear.

The true strength of large displacement engines is that big fat band of power that's quite useable in terms of acceleration. Smaller naturally aspirated engines with high specific output (I own one) need to be revved harder to stay near optimum performance. A car with less hp/l but a wider powerband can outperform my car in everything short of a top-speed contest.

OHC versus OHV, no big deal. Each makes sense in specific applications. OHV does make sense for larger engines with lower rpms, while OHC is almost necessary for smaller engines to meet both performance requirements and emissions/economy requirements. You can't go the OHV-large displacement-low rpm route for every car on the road... and not just because of displacement restrictions, but because it just wouldn't be practical in some cases. Engine height is a big handicap in a sportscar, but engine length and width are a much bigger issue in compact family cars.

The Prius is a red herring. Any time you compare an EPA estimate to real-world numbers, things won't add up. The Prius's handicap is that its planetary gearset is not optimized for cruising at higher speeds (in fact, the Prius has a pretty low top speed), thus it doesn't maximize its benefits on the EPA cycle. You can get 27 mpg at higher speeds on your personal car. But take the speeds lower on the highway, and you won't see significantly better than that... possibly 30+... whereas a Prius driver will actually see his 45 mpg go up to 50, 60, 70... or even 80 mpg (I've topped out at near 80).

Highway numbers never tell the full story. Large displacement engines with lots of torque can present good highway numbers, because they can "supercruise" at low rpms in a high gear. The real benefits of low displacement high output engines comes in the city cycle, where they can more than outdo bigger engines... given the proper gearing and programming... there are small-displacement crossovers that absolutely suck in terms of fuel economy...

Oh... and again... HP/L... relatively meaningless. Always sounds great when you're trying to achieve the most possible. But when you realize you've sacrificed useful mid-range hp/torque to eke out that last 10 hp... mid-range that you will miss over a band 2000+ rpms wide for a peak gain about 500 rpms narrow... you won't feel so hot about it... :lol:
 
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what makes you think that?

im actually pretty sure it is a v6 and not an i4 though from my previous post.


I could've sworn that's what it said about the car from GT2... I don't know if the Dirt trial car is a different one from the Pike's peak Escudo. I'm not a car expert but that is what I remember...
 
It seems to me that now the goal is to simply tell me I'm wrong.
Not really. My goal was to demonstrate that neither OHV nor OHC are perfect solutions. Nothing as inefficient and complicated as an internal combustion engine will ever allow one engineering solution to be absolutely, irrefutably better than another in every possible circumstance. Your combat aircraft example only underscores that point.

You're so fixated on "defending the honor" of a valvetrain type you have a clear bias for that you can't seem to interpret my middle-of-the-road contributions as anything but the most heinous, deceptive, pro-DOHC-and-everything-else-be-damned propaganda and tripe you've ever read. You're not even reading. You're reacting to what you've decided my opinion must be. I've kept it so removed from the discussion that you apparently can't even tell what my opinion is (hint: it has nothing to do with DOHC being some flawless pinnacle of automotive engineering).

When I provide facts that fairly counterbalance the advantages of OHV you've so feverishly supported, I'm "undoing" your efforts and somehow "placing DOHC at the top." When I contribute a thought experiment to show extra weight doesn't always negate a heavier engine's power advantage (using numbers I haphazardly plucked out of my ass on my first try), I'm "carefully manufacturing" a hypothetical to support my own agenda. When I point out things that support your case, you take them as a free opportunity to bash me over the head. When I give both sides of an issue, you attack the claim you disagree with, then ignore and repeat the other half.

You admit everything is a compromise, yet your arguments imply you believe the only compromises worth making are the ones you approve of, and that every industry engineer on the planet who disagrees is a puppet of their marketing department. Your concept of an engine's advantages, disadvantages, and "real world usability and livability" are apparently a universal standard everyone's thoughts must adhere to. I know you love ample low-end torque and response, but that doesn't mean everyone needs 300lb.ft to drive to work.

You're so upset that anyone might try to undermine your attempt to "prove" the unpopular -- that OHV valvetrains have their advantages and good points -- that you're shoving aside one of the few people in this thread who share that opinion: Me.

You don't distinguish between subjective and objective claims, and you're such an ardent fan of straw-men that I'm surprised you can knock them down as quickly and often as you churn them out. Speaking of argumentative fallacies, almost every sentence in this post starts with "you," which pretty much classifies the whole thing as ad hominem. Save your breath (fingertips?) in pointing that out, but know that I tried to be as fair and accurate as possible. Your method of discussion, though stocked with a healthy amount of facts (carefully plucked from one side of the issue), is so blithely reckless that continuing under some pretense of civility will only lead to an endless feedback loop of redundant arguments and walls of text. You love to respond, but refuse to listen.

I thought this might be a productive and entertaining thread; otherwise I wouldn't be in here making these long posts. It could still become one, but it certainly won't be from a discussion between us. I have better ways to spend my time on GTP than talking to a wall.

tl;dr:
Cool story, bro. I ain't even mad.
 
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BUt if you consider the rules for calculating displacement (a rotarty times 3 and NA compared to Turbo times 1.3(?) (don't remeber exactly) then there will be a new dimension of HP/L... ;)

Which really doesn't matter in my opinion either since a car needs more than power to win a race. Compare a fully tuned RX-7 and fully tuned R34 in the hands of Tsuchiya-san. The difference in lap times is small although the power difference is big.
 
so me not knowing how **** works has nothing to do with it, its just that OHV and OHC engines both have valves in the cylinder head and therefore ohc engines have ohv's.

Notice how you're the only one even remotely involved in the conversation that comes up with that crap? If you knew as much as you claim you'd have known that. Either way, if you "know what I mean now", why keep bringing it up? (just to make me respond? lol :p (<- that's a joke and rhetorical btw, not a question that needs an answer))


=========================================================


Wolfe, if your "goal" was to be as centrist as you claim then you failed - miserably.

Your last post is a familiar and trite online debate tactic. Make a huge post claiming to be "in the middle", thereby trying to paint yourself as "above it all" because you "don't have a side", then load it with backhanded comments, and try to make yourself look superior, while claiming to wash your hands of the whole thing.

Not impressive.

You slammed me for supposedly not seeing you as an even modestly potential "ally" (as it were), and making assumptions about your true personal opinion. You also now claim to have been trying demonstrate that both have their flaws.

This is a lie. OR.... you don't understand your own actions nor how debate works. I'm not sure which it is as I don't really know you.

Let's backtrack for a moment here - Someone made a comment that set me off and I replied. Your first post to me took up an opposition point, making false claims in the process. I replied to this and focused on your elevation of DOHC as some sort of panacea. Even if you don't personally feel it is, you simply claimed that it would make more power - period. It doesn't, and I addressed that.

It could have been left there. But you weren't content. So you responded. And that's fine, that's what a debate is. And that's why your last post here is more of a tantrum than anything else (cue Cartman - "screw you guys, I'm going home" :p ).

You did absolutely nothing to demonstrate any negative of DOHC beyond paying some vague lipservice to the notion that sometimes another solution might be a better fit, but never getting into why. In fact, if we take your bitter comment about how you claim that I view engineers as "slaves to their marketing dept.s", and combine that with other statements such as the notion that the entire world save for me, and maybe GM, sees DOHC as "bestest", it becomes clear that you are carrying the flag for pro-DOHC, even if just in this thread. So, you either feel that it is the be-all-end-all and simply are afraid to take a firm stand, OR, you are arguing just to argue.

Either way, it's insane for me to have to point out that it doesn't matter WHAT your true personal opinion may or may not be. All that matters is what you post in this debate. And all you have posted is boiled down to the prevailing mindset of "DOHC FTW". And THAT is what I have been debating AGAINST. Are you seeing how this works now? It doesn't matter if I see and advantages for OHC or not - I'm working against a prevailing tide of misconceptions about OHV, so it's simply obvious that that is all I will focus on. I'm certainly not going to argue against myself. And if I had no interest in showing people the positives of the other side, why would I bother at all? I wouldn't. (and fortunately, it seems that I had a positive effect on at least one person here, and I'm glad for that :) )

Likewise, given that the pro-OHC mindset IS the prevailing one.... if you WERE really content to view both sides as postive in certain contexts, then you would either have not felt any need to get involved at all, OR, taken the mirror image of the stance you did - i.e., pro OHV but gently so, even perhaps with caveats (not that you mentioned any OHC caveats beyond vague lipservice anyway). So, uh, yeah, you are the opponent and are working to "undo my efforts". Pretty simple really.

What's interesting is, for all your furor of trying to paint me as some fixated zealot who can't see where you really stand - you couldn't be more wrong. We never got into broader issues. So you don't know what my actual views are beyond the context of this debate (where, as mentioned, we are on opposing sides, and I won't argue against myself!). Clearly, with the fact that my entire stance is based around the inescapable fact that everything in engineering (and sales) is a compromise, I can't be the zealot you contend. So in fact, the one who really is fixated and can't see the larger picture is you - and this is supported by your false claims in your most recent post (which I've touched on above).

On the subject of compromises... if you had the wisdom you are trying to claim here, you'd readily agree that sales and marketing trump engineering. In ALL B2C commerce, from software to cars and everything in between. Engineers always want to perfect things, but the companies that pay them want to make money and have market demands to meet and a margins to worry about, which is why it's more important in the eyes of the people who pull the strings (managment, particularly the C-level). Even if something is not the best solution from an engineering standpoint, if it meets the critera of cost or market appeal, it gets preference.


As for low end torque - everybody loves it. Just some don't know it yet. ;) hehe (amusing related annecdote: I used to know a guy who worked for Scaled Composites (around the time they were building SS1). He had a huge (like 2 hour) commute, 1 way, through mountains and such. Was an ardent 3-Series guy. When he needed a new car, he was practically given a 2004 GTO, and despite himself, he took it, and he was immediately blown away by the power of the LS1. Of course, since he was an ass, and he and I didn't get along at the time (part of a larger group), he never missed a chance to slander it in any way possible - but that doesn't matter as I think most anyone would go with Clarkson and Co's comments on the Monaro anyway. Point is though, a die-hard push-rod *hater* finally got behind one and was gob-smacked. As long as we aren't talking about race cars or toys, it's nice to not have to always rev the nuts off it to get anywhere, and also know that it'll last pretty much forever too. ;) )


I have better ways to spend my time on GTP than talking to a wall.

Ditto. But, I'll do it anyway. ;)

And on that note, what-say if we continue, we ignore the person to person stuff in these last 2 posts and move on with the real crux of the debate? :) (if only to help cut through the murky stuff and back to the meat of the matter anyway)
 
Maximum HP/L actually means nothing. A more useful metric is which engine has the highest average hp per liter. Simply because "peak" hp is a rather useless statistic, especially when considering engines that will only be at that power peak exactly once in any gear.

The true strength of large displacement engines is that big fat band of power that's quite useable in terms of acceleration. Smaller naturally aspirated engines with high specific output (I own one) need to be revved harder to stay near optimum performance. A car with less hp/l but a wider powerband can outperform my car in everything short of a top-speed contest.

OHC versus OHV, no big deal. Each makes sense in specific applications. OHV does make sense for larger engines with lower rpms, while OHC is almost necessary for smaller engines to meet both performance requirements and emissions/economy requirements. You can't go the OHV-large displacement-low rpm route for every car on the road... and not just because of displacement restrictions, but because it just wouldn't be practical in some cases. Engine height is a big handicap in a sportscar, but engine length and width are a much bigger issue in compact family cars.

The Prius is a red herring. Any time you compare an EPA estimate to real-world numbers, things won't add up. The Prius's handicap is that its planetary gearset is not optimized for cruising at higher speeds (in fact, the Prius has a pretty low top speed), thus it doesn't maximize its benefits on the EPA cycle. You can get 27 mpg at higher speeds on your personal car. But take the speeds lower on the highway, and you won't see significantly better than that... possibly 30+... whereas a Prius driver will actually see his 45 mpg go up to 50, 60, 70... or even 80 mpg (I've topped out at near 80).

Highway numbers never tell the full story. Large displacement engines with lots of torque can present good highway numbers, because they can "supercruise" at low rpms in a high gear. The real benefits of low displacement high output engines comes in the city cycle, where they can more than outdo bigger engines... given the proper gearing and programming... there are small-displacement crossovers that absolutely suck in terms of fuel economy...

Oh... and again... HP/L... relatively meaningless. Always sounds great when you're trying to achieve the most possible. But when you realize you've sacrificed useful mid-range hp/torque to eke out that last 10 hp... mid-range that you will miss over a band 2000+ rpms wide for a peak gain about 500 rpms narrow... you won't feel so hot about it... :lol:

I didnt read all of this but a good example for what you said in the first few lines is again the Escudo, Massive power/l but it ONLY happens when the engine is above 7000 rpms.
 
You...now claim to have been trying demonstrate that both [OHV and OHC] have their flaws.
...
You did absolutely nothing to demonstrate any negative of DOHC beyond paying some vague lipservice to the notion that sometimes another solution might be a better fit, but never getting into why.
Really, the least you could do is copy and paste the actual text of what I wrote.

I said my "goal" was to demonstrate that neither OHV or OHC are perfect solutions. Seeing as you were busy knocking down OHC, it seemed like a pretty simple task -- point out how OHVs aren't perfect either, and state that neither is the best in all cases.

Your treatment of the topic was extremely one-sided. You even admit as much, saying it was necessary to overcome the "prevailing mindset." I only needed to bring out the other side (focusing on negatives) to bring the discussion into balance. If I had concentrated on why OHC is better (+), you'd have a point about my "neutrality" because we'd both be barking different mantras (+/+). But I didn't. I focused on the problems with OHV (-) because you ignored them to better-support OHV's "superiority" (+/-). You thought I was overwhelmingly pro-OHC because I kept poking holes in your OHV argument. I kept poking holes in your OHV argument because you were overwhelmingly pro-OHV.

And on that note, what-say if we continue, we ignore the person to person stuff in these last 2 posts and move on with the real crux of the debate? :) (if only to help cut through the murky stuff and back to the meat of the matter anyway)
The debate derailed because of the things I complained about last night. This new post of yours shows things haven't changed. I have no interest in discussing "hp/L" or "OHV vs OHC" while trying to fend off accusations of "DOHC fanboyism" at the same time.

I don't think I've misinterpreted your posts at any point. If I have misinterpreted you, I apologize. But you've clearly misread, ignored, or misinterpreted what I've written at several junctures. You're even unapologetic and think I'm "throwing a tantrum" because you failed to understand my stated "goal" and assumed I've been trying to highlight the flaws of both valvetrain types while only "paying vague lipservice" to the flaws of OHC. I didn't need to highlight them, and I didn't try. You did a fine job of covering that.

On that note, did it ever occur to you that some people (even some engineers) don't find those disadvantages -- "design/manufacture cost, bulk, weight, reliability, CG, etc." to quote your list -- to be quite as gut-wrenchingly horrifying as you seem to think they are? In light of modern performance cars, I'm tempted to say your emphasis of those issues is absurd. They are valid (I said the same thing in post #17), but with how important they are to you, it's no wonder I was unable to address them to your satisfaction.

It doesn't take a genius to figure out I'm not a huge fan of OHV. By process of elimination, that means I prefer OHC. But while I admitted, from the very first post I made in this thread, that DOHC and its relevant engine traits have their faults, the only thing you've admitted is that you deliberately focused on the positives of OHV (ignoring the negatives) in an attempt to sway the minds of others.

Sorry to spoil your pet project.
 
So... you aren't done afterall. I guess you really _don't_ have better things to do, eh? :D


I kept poking holes in your OHV argument because you were overwhelmingly pro-OHV.

You TRIED, operative word, poking holes in it, but never once succeeded, except perhaps in your mind maybe. My responses were to correct all your inaccuracies and false assumptions and equally false claims. IOW, talking to a wall (or lead even), but even if it won't get through to you, I'll still do it anyway for the sake of the wider viewing audience.



The debate derailed because of the things I complained about last night. This new post of yours shows things haven't changed. I have no interest in discussing "hp/L" or "OHV vs OHC" while trying to fend off accusations of "DOHC fanboyism" at the same time.

Then don't. What you do, quite clearly, have interest in is giving off an air of superiority so that you can "look good" and seem "wise" in this argument. To that end, you can't simply walk away, even after you claim to intend to do just that. The only way you could would be if I allowed you to by not responding. It's not enough for you to address me personally and then have me do so back - you need to re-engage after that.

Nothing new. Very typical on the internet.



I don't think I've misinterpreted your posts at any point. If I have misinterpreted you, I apologize.

You've leapt to assumptions based off your reading of them which are absolutely not correct, so yes, you have. But more than that, you also haven't understood them, or, if I were to give you benefit of the doubt, don't care about the nature of the content in pursuit of your greater goal. (one or the other)


But you've clearly misread, ignored, or misinterpreted what I've written at several junctures.

Not even in the slightest. This proves the above - that either you simply don't understand the realities of the subject the way you want to appear to, or, you have another goal here, and such goal would require you to make such claims. I've seen "you" a thousand times across all the internet fora. It's practually a formula by now.


You're even unapologetic

Absolutely. Have no reason to be (apologetic). :)


and think I'm "throwing a tantrum" because you failed to understand my stated "goal"

You did throw a tantrum by shifting things and making them personal and ending with a classic "I have better things to do than respond to you" line, yet, in true and predictable form, guess what? You're back! :D lol Hence, a tantrum (to be nice about it). ;)

I've also misunderstood nothing. Try all you like to spin it, but the simple fact remains, no matter what you THINK you were doing, or what you CLAIM you were doing, you were making false claims in an effort to shoot down the facts I was posting, which in turn, caused me to focus on you and your myths. And, when you were running out of such myths, you went personal. Following the formula to a T. :)


On that note, did it ever occur to you that some people (even some engineers) don't find those disadvantages -- "design/manufacture cost, bulk, weight, reliability, CG, etc." to quote your list -- to be quite as gut-wrenchingly horrifying as you seem to think they are? In light of modern performance cars, I'm tempted to say your emphasis of those issues is absurd. They are valid (I said the same thing in post #17), but with how important they are to you, it's no wonder I was unable to address them to your satisfaction.

Sure, some people prefer over-stressed, over-complicated, over-priced applications. Absolutely. I did mention that more than a few times here. ;)

You still choose to ignore, or, can't accept, the reality of the total usage life of a STREET vehicle, and more importantly, the power heirarchy of departments in a consumer goods manufacturing company. And 'round and round we go. lol

BTW, here's the thing. If I'm wrong about you, if you really aren't simply unable to let go without the "last word" and the appearances I mentioned, then you can prove it very easily.... by doing what you claimed in your last post and focusing on those "better things" you have to do here and elsewhere. I do fully expect you to reply however. ;)


It doesn't take a genius to figure out I'm not a huge fan of OHV. By process of elimination, that means I prefer OHC. But while I admitted, from the very first post I made in this thread, that DOHC and its relevant engine traits have their faults, the only thing you've admitted is that you deliberately focused on the positives of OHV (ignoring the negatives) in an attempt to sway the minds of others.

.....and? You're proving many of my points here all over again. This little blurb is utterly irrelevant to anything, certainly to the discussion of the myths of DOHC. You clearly have a reason to be so fixated on it though - rather than the actual debate, which you never really had a leg to stand on in the first place. Really, is all this necessary? (Rhetorical, because I know it is, to you, which is why you will reply to this with the same tone you have done twice in a row now, and back 'round we'll go again. Maybe it's worked on others in the past for you? Doesn't on me.)


Sorry to spoil your pet project.

No worries. :) You haven't even come close to spoiling anything at all, and I don't have a pet project anyway, so we're good.

I'd even suggest a drink and some pool if you weren't so far away, but, somehow, I doubt you'd be in very good spirits for such a thing, given what has been revealed so far. hehe :)
 
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