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As far as to address your port matching question the dan, the idea is not to port match to the gasket but to the components without the gasket interfering. In other words the air stream should flow unimpeded into the cylinder head. You can make a paper trace of the cylinder head and cut out a port match. Lay the intake gaskets in place along with your paper trace aligned with duct tape. Start all of your intake bolts. Flip the tape onto intake so your trace will not move and now remove the intake. Using a fine sharpe trace the areas you will need to port. This is about as close as you are going to get it.
(but he is hurting port velocity, by making it bigger)
not to jack the thread, but since it was mostly on port matching, how do you port match vortec heads to the intake? there is this huge gasket opening probably about 1/8-1/4" around the perimeter of the port is exposed with the gaskets that you buy, thats allot to take off..
port matching your intake reduces inlet turbulence which will make porting tight radius', enlarged runners, multi angle valve jobs a complete waste of time if you don't do it! You DON'T need a flow bench to understand how simple this is. You can see how this works with running water out of your tap. Turn the faucet on and observe the stream of water. Now stick the edge of your finger into the edge of the stream. You will see the water bend and actually has a velocity gain. This is the idea behind porting tight smooth radius' ...Now stick your finger under the stream of water and watch the turbulence send the water bouncing all over the place and reducing the time it takes the water to leave the tap and make it to the basin. Air flowing in the intake and running into the side of the cylinder head if not properly matched will cause the same effect. It's a very simple and easy concept which results in a very good performance gain. If you feel that it's over-rated so be it but I speak from experience.As far as to address your port matching question the dan, the idea is not to port match to the gasket but to the components without the gasket interfering. In other words the air stream should flow unimpeded into the cylinder head. You can make a paper trace of the cylinder head and cut out a port match. Lay the intake gaskets in place along with your paper trace aligned with duct tape. Start all of your intake bolts. Flip the tape onto intake so your trace will not move and now remove the intake. Using a fine sharpe trace the areas you will need to port. This is about as close as you are going to get it.
You do not hurt velocity by enlarging the port " Come on now, Then why did GM start making the "peanut port" big block head? Why did they in the '80's start using a D-port exhaust?
Oh yea, Should Chad have got the cheapy Mr. Gasket exhaust gaskets hanging on the wall at the local parts store & ground the exhaust port to that shape? May as well, while there on the bench covered with cast iron grit, it is free after all! Those silly wabbits, You would think the engineers would have known this.
On newer Chrysler's & some foregin cars why the vacuum controlled valve/gate that opens part of the intake as the RPM's go up? You admitted in your post about the water "stick the tip of your finger in & the velocity goes up"? So which is it? Then later, " if you enlarge the opening forming an egg" you agree that this hurts velocity. Is this not what you told Chad to do? "Open the head to the gasket size (that would be bigger than the runner in the head, Right? Then "trace the gasket shape & grind away" To anybody who can read & comprehend basic reading you have made half of "an egg" on the intake & half at the head entrance.
Is this not what you told Chad to do? "Open the head to the gasket size (that would be bigger than the runner in the head, Right? Then "trace the gasket shape & grind away" To anybody who can read & comprehend basic reading you have made half of "an egg" on the intake & half at the head entrance. I did not misunderstand any of this.
Lets face it, Were not going to agree on this. I feel you, like ALLOT of people have been doing this "port matching" for years, not knowing what the TRUE results are.
vile u make me laugh u help me learn...lmao and how u can do both at the same time ...Its amazing lol