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Cylinder Head Porting - Head Porting Basics

Get more power out of your cylinder heads by following five easy rules
By David Vizard
Photography by Johnny Hunkins, David Vizard

1.Locate the point of greatest restriction, and work on that first.
2. Try to let the air move the way it wants to, not the way you think it should.
3. Air is heavier than you think. Keep the port velocity up and avoid redundant cross-sectional areas.
4. Mixture motion (swirl or tumble, or a combination of both) is important--do not ignore it.
5. Shape is all-important--a shiny finish is not.

Head Porting
Head Porting Port Section Comparative Flow
FIG. 1-Here's a small-block Chevy head (lower left) divided into three sections. From the flow figures of each section, it can be seen that the worst impediment to flow occurs at the valve, not in the main body of the port.
Head Porting Valve Seat Forms
FIG.2-With its sharp edge, A has the worst efficiency of this group. The single-cut 45-degree seat (B) is smaller under the valve but flows much better. With a three-angle cut (C) the seat area is better yet, and a forth cut (D) at the bottom (blue) can usually add a little more.
Head Porting Radius Seat
FIG. 3-Three- and four-angle valve jobs are approaching the form seen on the port side of this seat. The same idea (i.e. curving the shape away from the seat) is also functional on the chamber-side of the seat.
Head Porting Intake Port Flow
FIG 4-At high valve lift, most of the air fails to make it around the short-side turn and instead exits section A on the long side. This biases the direction of the flow and contributes toward a strong swirl action, which is desirable for low- and mid-speed torque.
Head Porting Valve Area
FIG. 5This shows what is meant by valve curtain area. At a lift equal to .25 of the valve's diameter, the curtain area is equal to the valve area.
Head Porting
FIG. 6-For the valves of this small-block Chevy head to be totally un-shrouded, there would need to be a clear space out to the circles around each valve. As can be seen here, the bore causes shrouding (red) as well as the combustion chamber (green).
Head Porting Zero Shrouding Condition
FIG. 7-If the combustion chamber wall progresses away from the valve seat at a 38-degree angle as shown here, the valve will be just at the point of being totally un-shrouded.
Head Porting Air Flow Pattern
FIG. 8-Biasing the port so that the flow "windows" toward the center of the cylinder reduces the mid- to high-lift shrouding seen by the valve. The port bias can also help generate swirl.

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