We design and manufacture all of our profiles. We use a program that we created that uses for the most-part, 6,7, or 8 decimal place polynomial equations. We can do this by hand with a calculator, but the computer allows us to do it millions of times faster. In the old days, using a desk-top calculator would many times give a design that might not show up flawed untill it was ground. A couple weeks lost.
Our cams are 6 or 7 different sections, each section can contribute up to 10 million different cams at any given lift in the section. Some would be too big,others small, some could not physically be made, and others might only be different in millionth of an inch increments. Engines react to different curve families and do not notice differences in millionth's of an inch. We have a very slow initial opening to minimize reversion, then we open it fast. We are able to catch cams at .050 lift that are 6-10 degrees bigger at the seat. We also slow the closing down for two reasons. 1:we build so much more port velocity than others because even though we may open the valve later, we start flow sooner because a reversion in the port costs valuable time. A port that starts flow late, will never catch up. Due to our higher percentage of clean air flow, we get to #2: The more velocity I build, the longer cylinder filling will continue to RAM the cylinder after BDC. So, why hurry and shut the valve? Take advantage of inertia! Close it slowly unlike conventional Symmetrical designs. It gives you extra time and it also shuts gentle enough to stay shut taking advantage of ALL of the charge, and (here is the good part) Your intake port does not have a reversion due to a valve bounce during the compression stroke. So when the intake valve opens again, It will fill instead of having several crank degrees try to reverse the reversion. The proof that we pick up the flow is the increased fuel required at high RPM since an increase in air flow demands an increase in fuel also. This is why many Blowers are blowing the burst panels. Years ago, We were the only ones that did not cause this to happen in a test of a Nitro Hemi conducted by a really big name.(Almost a house-hold name to racers) We also picked the motor up nearly 500 HP with ten LBS less boost than any other cam they tried.
Shaun TiedeULTRADYNE Arl,TX(stiede@ev1.net)