To use an example brought up by nosmatt, how should the cam dimensions be changed when moving to a larger volume port? Or how should cam dimensions change when moving form a heavy vehicle to one that is 500lbs lighter? These are not trick questions, and if Buddy Rawls can figure it out, I would think most people could at least understand it, even if they can't apply it as effectively.
AGREED on the last part. absolutly even.
if i could explain fully on how the valve timing events should change when "x" is changed here or there, i would be a cam designer myself
i can give another example......
say you have a 302, you want 350hp, if you use a gt40 head to get there, you may have to use a cam with alot of duration, and alot of overlap to help pull the a/f charge into the combustion chamber.
now, change to a large port head, say an afr 205, the cyl is filled so much more quickly when that valve opens, that the duration those valves stay open is not nearly as long as the small port head.(being that the port flows so much more, and the cross section of that port is so much larger----meaning it kinda has more in "reserve" sitting in that port already) now that overlap is not needed at all, and in fact, if it had as much (as the gt40 head setup), it may allow cylinder pressure to actually bleed off, and thus power could be down....
now, how they come up with the actual timing events, as far as i understand it.......
take into consideration, you have 300 cu", you need to fill that space as effectivly as possible in the given rpm range it is to be used, first you must know what that is..... now, you need to determine how much air is needed, and when you need to open the valve to achieve this. knowing how much the head flows is paramount, as is the cross section of the port etc... now that you know when the valve must be opened, and how long to hold it open, you know your duration, now you gotta move onto the exhuast, and using all the info for the entire exhuast system, figure out where your valve events need to be to fully evacuate the cyl, and at the same time, use the exhuast draw on the cylinder as it is exiting to help draw in the intake charge (where overlap is quite useful) now this affects the events you already had for the intake, so these will need to be modified.....eventually you come up with the events you need.
now you can start looking at different lobes (in cam manufacturers catlogs) for the intake, and exhuast that will help you meet your goals, and have the cam ground with "x" lobe for an intake, and "y" lobe for the exhuast, and wherever you want your centerlines etc...now your lsa is determined, not the other way around.
fwiw, IMHO, a larger port head, with a smaller cam will be the more docile combo, yet offer the top end, and torque the smaller port head would......and, it appears that the oem's are doing this type of thing as well. the 4.6 4v cobra engines have crazy large intake ports for only 281 cu", and tiny ass cams to make em livable. kinda like the ls1 stuff as well.
finally...........this is all how i understand it, after more than a few year studing it, and building different stangs, some of which worked great, and others that did not!