Dohc? Sohc
is our DOHC (dual over head cam) or SOHC (single overhead cam)?
is our DOHC (dual over head cam) or SOHC (single overhead cam)?
Doesnt the cam have to work harder being that it has more lobes than a DOHC setup? I guess I always thought that having DOHC over SOHC the more the cams, the better the efficiency and less stress on the cam to begin with. Anyone else know anything about this?luvmylegend said:to be more specific, we have a single overhead cam and 24 valves. Most engines need 4 cams to run 24 valves, but ours is special and only uses one cam per head (2 per engine).
trueFF Drifter said:The L-series motors in the old Zs were still SOHC. Around that time however, no one ever imagined such a thing as TWO overhead cams, so why would they specify OHC as having only one single cam? The acronmym SOHC only came about after twin cams were around to differentiate it.
From my understanding, it takes alot more R&D and engineering to derive the greatest amounts of HP/cc out of a N/A engine than it does to slap a turbo onto a basic engine that has just been built with stronger materials and crank the boost up.Bang&Olufsen DK said:
btw in your signature, what is it about Forced induction do you not like? you say cheap but what about it is cheap?
So, what your saying is, you admire Honda more for not going F/I?? Honda does have the highest specific output motors for the money, am I right???FF Drifter said:That's exactly it. While Mercedes uses superchargers and Audi uses turbos, BMW remains true to natural aspiration. Mercedes and Audi (as well as many other commpanies) often rely on forced induction to power their highest performing machines ~ but BMW still remains competitive with their naturally aspirated motors.
Think about that: while it's easy to slap on a turbo and get big power, BMW instead dives into further engineering, tweaking their engines for all they've got, applying new technology and engineering each detail to its fullest. Double VANOS, Valvetronic, etc. are all results. Every little thing has to be designed to fully extract the potential of the motor. With forced induction; you can have a ****ty design and still make that kind of power. You can have flaws and mistakes and offset it with a supercharger, or hide your engineering downfalls with a turbo. BMW still stands strong with natural aspiration... doing it right... the hard way.
Turbo is great, but there are plenty of downfalls. Power delivery is uneven, intercoolers and extra piping is heavy and bothersome, extra oil lines and fuel-mapping is annoying, and throttle response and control overall are lost.
Superchargers are much the same way... powerbands in supercharged cars are notoriously peaky, the throttle response suffers also, and like a turbo, full control of the car is lost. With forced induction, you hand over control over power to weather conditions, ie humidity and ambient temperature.
Although such factors play into naturally aspirated performance as well, think of how much more an n/a engine is "free" of outside conditions since it doesn't have to deal with lower compression, intercoolers, uneven boost, or differing air pressures.
Man I can go on and on ~ but just put it this way: when you pull on a car that's blowing off, when you overtake a car with the telltale supercharger whine, when you pass up a turboed whatever, and you are still naturally aspirated, then what does that say about how your car is built? It's the respect.
Yes, I do admire Honda for that. I am a great Nissan fan, but I do hold respect for Honda simply because of their pig-headedness about the n/a issue. Hondas make big specific output per liter. I think BMW actually has one up on Honda though, because BMWs make torque, whereas Hondas mess with hp/torque ratios for marketing purposes. Remember, horsepower sells cars, but torque is true power. :werd: So my friend can say: oh yeah?!! well Preludes have 200hp just like your Legend!!! And I can say, yeah really? but does the H22 make 210 lb/ft of torque? Alright, shut up then.SNEEK-E HONDA KA7 said:
So, what your saying is, you admire Honda more for not going F/I?? Honda does have the highest specific output motors for the money, am I right???
Most VTEC Hondas are at 80-120 HP/Liter. Only BMW M technology can match Honda for bragging rights, and of course torque also. But, generally, Honda has more high specific output cars available ( or did thru the 90's) than BMW, at a MUCH cheaper cost.
That's not always true. Viper and big block muscle-car drivers eventually complain about their sorry gas mileage, and every Honda owner is a spokesperson for specific output. "oh yeah?!! hondas 120hp out of 1.6L!!!" Man I hear it all the time. Some people do care how their power is made... at least the car enthusiasts do.
Anyway, most people don't care about how the power is made (Camaro and Mustang peeps), they just know they want it. I don't think F/I is cheating. Spending a but-tload of money on engineering a expensive motor is cheating us out of affordable fun.
Oh sure I believe that. Even a Corvette can be more frugal than a second-gen KA. But I was referring more to my grandpa's Chevy Nova with a 350 small block, or those '67 Mustang hotrodders.SNEEK-E HONDA KA7 said:BTW, on your muscle car arguement, I KNOW a Camaro Z28 gets better gas mileage than a Legend. I had a Camaro Z28 (92) and it got 40% better MPG than my new at the time 97.5 Altima SE.
I think BMW makes the best n/a. Honda is good, but they are more playing the numbers game by sacrificing torque (high-revving motors) in exchange for a good horsepower figure. BMW does a "true" power increase. And Ferrari... well they're exotics. What do you think?HotHonda said:BMW, Ferrari and Honda make the best N/A.
Nissan makes the best Turbo and Autos.
And Toyota is the best reliability and integrity.
I thought Mazda's Miller Cycle was only applied to the Millenia S, which happens to employ a light pressure S/C.FF Drifter said:
Mazda makes killer n/a too. Ever seen their Miller cycle engines?