usaf_branham
15 Year Member
I understand that the high cylinder pressure at low rpms is what produces the crazy torque I get from the twin screw. I make 435 lbs of tq at around 2200 rpm.
With that being said, I know that our powdered rods and hyperutectic (forgive my spelling) are the weak links in our motors. My understanding was that the load increase from rpm, especially past 6000 rpm is usually what caused the rods to give out. The crappy pistons are prone to ring land destruction with detonation, which is why a spot on tune is so important.
So, I may be a tad bit confused here, but I was always under the impression that as long as the tune was spot on, and the rpms did not go over 6k, stock 2 valves are pretty much safe (so long as horsepower did not go over approx 425 at the wheels).
I am not a nitrous guy, but logic would tell me that if my stock shortblock can handle cracking the throttle at around 2500 rpm, boost goes straight to 9 psi (which is alot of cylinder pressure), than a stock n/a shortblock should be able to take a pretty decent hit of nitrous around the same rpm range and not suffer from a tossed rod or shattered ring land, so long as the tune is spot on, and the horsepower is under 425 at the wheels. Or am I comparing apples to oranges here?
I know the threshold is between 400 and 450 depending on the motor, I am using 425 as an average frame of reference.
With that being said, I know that our powdered rods and hyperutectic (forgive my spelling) are the weak links in our motors. My understanding was that the load increase from rpm, especially past 6000 rpm is usually what caused the rods to give out. The crappy pistons are prone to ring land destruction with detonation, which is why a spot on tune is so important.
So, I may be a tad bit confused here, but I was always under the impression that as long as the tune was spot on, and the rpms did not go over 6k, stock 2 valves are pretty much safe (so long as horsepower did not go over approx 425 at the wheels).
I am not a nitrous guy, but logic would tell me that if my stock shortblock can handle cracking the throttle at around 2500 rpm, boost goes straight to 9 psi (which is alot of cylinder pressure), than a stock n/a shortblock should be able to take a pretty decent hit of nitrous around the same rpm range and not suffer from a tossed rod or shattered ring land, so long as the tune is spot on, and the horsepower is under 425 at the wheels. Or am I comparing apples to oranges here?

I know the threshold is between 400 and 450 depending on the motor, I am using 425 as an average frame of reference.

Crappy Piece of S***T Dorman intake
. Which started leaking a year and a half after my install.
Had to get that off my chest. My bad, for the digression.