Pelican Parts Forums

Pelican Parts Forums (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/)
-   911 Engine Rebuilding Forum (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/911-engine-rebuilding-forum/)
-   -   Can I use these cams (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/911-engine-rebuilding-forum/333084-can-i-use-these-cams.html)

911quest 03-01-2007 05:14 AM

Can I use these cams
 
Well instead of spending a bunch of money an my first engine build I am doing one out of parts I have accumulated over the last couple of years my question is can I use solex cams in a stock 2.2T motor? Thanks

304065 03-01-2007 05:45 AM

911T pistons have very small valve reliefs cut into the dome. The reason Porsche didn't specify that they were any larger, like the ones cut into the dome on the 911 Normal, 911 L or 911E pistons (the "Solex Pistons") , is that the lift and duration of the T cam didn't require the clearance.

What this tells us is that the Solex Pistons have those reliefs to keep the valves from hitting them. Therefore, you cannot use Solex cams with the T pistons, as they will hit the valves.

However, there is a bright light at the end of all this. I don't recommend re-using the original 911T pistons anyway. The last 2,0 T to roll off the line was 38 years ago, so the odds of your pistons having a top ring groove in spec are not that high. If you use new rings with the old pistons, you will get broken compression rings, just like the guy who rebuilt my 2,0 liter engine 25 years ago did, and which I detail with pictures over on the teardown thread.

Instead, you should consider using JE pistons which will facilitate a mild compression increase from the T's 8.6:1 to around 9.0:1. These can be ordered with valve reliefs to clear the Solex cams.

The most important thing to remember is if you start mixing and matching combinations of parts that were never mixed and matched by the factory you are on your own, a test pilot, a prototype engineer. If this is your first engine build you would be well advised to stick with a proven combination that will allow you to focus on the assembly operation, not on whether the parts will work together. And no matter what happens, make sure you perform the piston-to-cylinder clearance checks that are detailed in Wayne's book before you turn the engine over. This can REALLY save you money :)

911quest 03-01-2007 08:30 AM

John I agree with you I have collected the parts to build a 2.2E motor with a 70.4 crank etc. What I'am doing now is putting a used motor together for my 914/6 basically just to do it and to be able to drive the car this summer I can't personally see spending 3-4000.00 to build my first engine I have 600.00 bucks in this motor and it if it last 6months I'am cool with that the way I look at Iam using this motor as a learning experience so when Iam ready to build a better motor I won't be going at it with no knowledge.

But thanks for the answer on the cams that's what I was thinking.

camgrinder 03-02-2007 09:35 AM

Grind the T cams to E specs and get a little more out of it.

Henry Schmidt 03-02-2007 12:07 PM

Increase the valve pockets and use the solex cams.
It is a simple job that most automotive machine shops can handle.
Solex is are far superior grind over the E cam IMHO.


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 11:53 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website


DTO Garage Plus vBulletin Plugins by Drive Thru Online, Inc.