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I am not sure what a short duration cam is? Is that a cam with narrow lobs and less overlap? It would seem this design would not breath very well.
Thanks, Dan
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Hi Dan,
Duration is the time that the valves are open, measured in degrees. An engine cannot begin to compress anything until the intake valve is closed. Since nearly all engines do not close the intake valve until the piston has already started up on the compression stroke, the engine does not achieve it's rated mechanical compression ratio until intake mixture inertia at higher rpm, overcomes the rising piston's reverse intake pumping. At this engine speed/mixture velocity, the engine will achieve it's rated mechanical compression ratio.
Depending on the cam design, this process can begin at low rpm, short duration cam, intake valve closes earlier, more cylinder pressure at low rpm - higher compression gage readings at cranking speeds.
A long duration cam would close the intake valve later & lower the apparent compression, cylinder pressure, until the intake inertia overcomes the reverse intake pumping. As you know, this reverse pumping (reversion) can cause a poor idle & lower compression gage readings. The trade off is better cylinder filling at higher rpm thus more horsepower. Longer duration cams usually do have more overlap.
Compression ratio, cam timing, & intake/exhaust ports/valves/plumbing must all be matched to each other & to the intended use of the engine.
D