NA Build

  • david2327
    david2327
    Junior Member
    • 2

    #16
    I think that it's a very good question that I would also like an answer to. Everyone knows that it's easier and cheaper to make power with a turbo but this question has been asked alot and I think it deserves an answer. Unfortunatly I don't have the answer but I'm sure you would have to do the same things it takes to make na power on any engine. No one here is asking how expensive it is… only what to do to get it done. It bugs me when people reply to a post without a positive and helpful answer. I really hope that when I decide to come to this forum for valuable information I get answers that really help instead of sarcastic comments from people who don't know the answer. I really hope that someone provides a good answer for this question.
  • Russ84na
    Russ84na
    Senior Member
    • 700

    #17
    SATAN wrote: Russ is building a badass NA. Chime in Russ, I dont wanna steal your spotlight.
    As has been mentioned before I have been trying to get to 200+ whp for several years.
    The pistons came in this week for my new build.

    [attachment=0:3c6ae]Z31 custom Ross pistons 019 (Small).jpg[/attachment:3c6ae]

    They will give me a 12:1 compression ratio. Hope to have it on the dyno by February and have some numbers to post.
    …and how much HP do you have at 0 boost
  • SATAN
    SATAN
    Senior Member
    • 6782

    #18
    david2327 wrote: I think that it's a very good question that I would also like an answer to. Everyone knows that it's easier and cheaper to make power with a turbo but this question has been asked alot and I think it deserves an answer. Unfortunatly I don't have the answer but I'm sure you would have to do the same things it takes to make na power on any engine. No one here is asking how expensive it is… only what to do to get it done. It bugs me when people reply to a post without a positive and helpful answer. I really hope that when I decide to come to this forum for valuable information I get answers that really help instead of sarcastic comments from people who don't know the answer. I really hope that someone provides a good answer for this question.
    Oh, boy.

    When running NA you cannot move as much air in a given amount of time as a turbo car due to the lack of pressure(or I should say "volume"). What can you do to move more air then? You need higher RPM's. You can move more air but you just need more strokes to do it. This means higher redline. This is a problem on the VG30. anything above 7k and you are looking at bad stuff happening to the rods if it is that high for an extended amount of time. You need rods and good rods. Eagle rods recomends not going higher than 8500rpm's. Thats not good enough. I am looking for 10k rpms on my 3.3liter. So.... good rods. Maybe you dont want to go 3.3 liter due to the fact that you are adding weight to the piston by adding diameter. No good for revs.

    Now displacement, Take your 3.3 liter and take it out as far as you can. They say you cant go further than 3.4 liters, but guess what… Thats for turbo. Face it, you just flat out wont be making the power of a built turbo, BUT this allows you more bore I would assume. The walls do not have to hold as much pressure. How far can you take it? Got me, try it and find out.

    Now, you could stroke the engine to gain displacement, but that is not helping your 10k rev limit AT ALL! To much piston speed, and now you gotta bring your RPM's back down. Its give and take. An engine is always give and take. Maybe even DE-stroke the engine a little. Some of the badass z32 race cars ran a vg30 de-stroked to a 2.6 liter I believe (somebody may know for sure) to get a higher red line.

    Compression ratio's. Now 9:1 aint doing shit for your NA power. You wanna bump that up to about 12:1 maybe even 13:1. Yeah, you gotta run race gas all the time now. Meh whatever. EDIT> (funny, Russ just posted he is running 12:1 as I was typing this LOL)

    Combustion chamber shaping. Hmmm, yeah, study up on that before you go making what you have worse than what you started with.

    Cam shaft profiles and gears. If you are running a really high RPM motor you are going to want good over lap for scavenging of exhaust gasses. You dont always want to run a high lift. The faster it ramps up, the more of a chance you get for valve float. Do research on cam shafts. SOHC, well… you can only shift your power band now cant you. Well since this is a high revving engine, you are probably going to be staying above 5k for the majority of your racing. Guess you better shift your power band to the higher side then.

    Roller/solid lifter. Roller lifters obviously have less friction and allow you to run a more aggressive cam profile. Solid lifters, no spongy crap for this engine. Time to manually get your lash correct!

    Light weight everything. Anything that moves in the engine bay can help if it is lighter weight EXCEPT THE HARMONIC BALANCER. If you go light on that, it should still be a harmonic damper and NOT just a lightweight pully! Lightweight parts, A- not as much rotational inertia and B- Lighter weight parts are easier to keep in check. Lighter valves dont float as easily. Lighter flywheels rob less power and help the engine rev faster. Stuff like that.

    Retain your heat. Heat = power. Keep the heat where it is making the power. If your heat is leaving the cylinder through the walls or through the head or through the piston, then it is not being used to make power. Coatings help keep heat where it should be. Coat top of pistons, coat cylinder head combustion chambers, valves… anything you can think of, hell even the intake manifold. Keep heat where it should be and cool air where it should be also.

    Tuning your exhaust and intake. This itself could be a whole damn book. Cam profiles come into play, runner lengths, pipe diameters, pipe tapers, pipe lengths. Lots of reading can be done on this, I'm not going into it here.

    Porting and polishing? No shit, this can actually help? The hell you say? Make EVERYTHING as smooth as you can on a direct port fuel injected system. Keep ALL of your transitions as smooth as possible. If you have to have a step, make sure flow steps OUT and not IN. You can have it taper in but not step in.

    Valve jobs. 3 or 5 angle, yeah just more stuff to help flow.

    Moly coatings. You can coat friction surfaces like your bearings and your piston skirts to reduce the friction. Obviously, that will help.

    Balancing and knife edging crank shafts, balancing, polishing rods and crank shaft. Knife edge cuts through the oil better than smacking it like a open hand on a water bed mattress. This also keeps oil from frothing. If your crank shaft is polished, oil has a harder time sticking to it, same with the rods. You can run crank scrapers to keep the oil down in the pan where it belongs. Balancing, well… your engine should be properly balanced regardless of the performance you are trying to get.

    Shifting tolerances. You can shift all of your bearing tolerances to the looser side of things. This is not good for longevity but is good to reduce friction and free up maybe .00000001 hp.

    Blow by = bad. Where do you think the majority of your blow by comes from? Most people would say the gap in the rings. Well this can be true depending on how big the gap is. What if you ran some total seal gap-less rings? Hey, leakdown of less that 1% sounds fricken awsome to me! But wait, with gap-less rings should seal perfect right? NO, your cylinder is never perfectly round. The rings cant conform to the cylinder perfectly. This is where lots of blow by can come into play. In many cases this is more of a problem then ring gap! I have actually herd (Or I dreamed this up) of pistons that have holes in the top of the piston that lead to the area right behind the ring, MEANING, as your piston compresses, it send pressure to the back side of those rings FORCING them tighter against the cylinder wall, Forcing them to conform to the cylinder wall more, thus reducing blow by even more.

    Nitrous? Pffft. That is blasphemy when talking NA. But getting your fuel and timing PERFECT (which can take months, even years with some perfectionists) can benifit you quite a bit when trying to make power with ANY application, turbo OR N/A.

    Meh, I grow weary of this. Too much effort for not enough power, I dont even run N/A why am I even typing this shit out? Oh, that right, because you guys asked.

    There is plenty more that you can do, this should get you started, OH and dont forget to post your results in a few years when you finally get that super engine built! :twisted:
    85 Z31 6.0 LSX turbo 766whp/792wtq
    04 GTO, LS6, big cam, porting, N20… underway for summertime daily driver.
  • chronic
    chronic
    Senior Member
    • 413

    #19
    satan you're so groovey
  • SATAN
    SATAN
    Senior Member
    • 6782

    #20
    Notice I didn't mention money at all in that post. At least I dont think I did.
    85 Z31 6.0 LSX turbo 766whp/792wtq
    04 GTO, LS6, big cam, porting, N20… underway for summertime daily driver.
  • XiOus271
    XiOus271
    Senior Member
    • 362

    #21
    satan, that was a really good read on NA power! i do a good bit of reading for NA power (albeit for my MR2) but thats probably some of the best information ive read compared to ive come across so far.
    1986 300ZX Turbo - Sold
    1991 Toyota MR2 - RIP
    2007 BMW 335i - Daily driver
  • david2327
    david2327
    Junior Member
    • 2

    #22
    Maybe Satan's response should be in a sticky so that people can read that before asking again. I think maybe that will help anyone out who is looking to build up an NA engine. And thanks again for not bringing up the money side of things and hopefully no one will ask the question of how much all that will cost because I'm scared to even think of those kind of numbers. Thanks again Satan.
  • Russ84na
    Russ84na
    Senior Member
    • 700

    #23
    david2327 wrote: Maybe Satan's response should be in a sticky so that people can read that before asking again. I think maybe that will help anyone out who is looking to build up an NA engine. And thanks again for not bringing up the money side of things and hopefully no one will ask the question of how much all that will cost because I'm scared to even think of those kind of numbers. Thanks again Satan.
    I never hear anyone say just how much they spent on their turbo conversions. It can't be that cheap when you add in all the parts cars and new turbos, intercoolers etc.
    When I get done I will give you a cost breakdown on everything I do.
    Both of my cars are putting out almost as much power as a stock turbo and will take almost any Z 240 to 350 turbo or NA that comes to an autoX event.
    So if the argument is can you get more power out of turbo for less, you have to spell out how much power and what you want to use it for.
    …and how much HP do you have at 0 boost
  • SATAN
    SATAN
    Senior Member
    • 6782

    #24
    Here is the deal with building NA vs Turbo. With a turbo system it is EASY to get good results. Mainly because the system is not as picky when it comes to flaws as an N/A motor. You can slap a piss poor manifold on that doesent even seal all the way. You can put a poor flowing intake system on the car. Lots of things can be done VERY half assed on a turbo application and the user will still see positive horsepower gains as long as boost is built.

    Building an NA engine is more of an art. Little mistakes can hurt you WAY more than they would with a turbo car. If you have steps in your intake pipes, a turbo engine doesnt really care as long as it is getting its pressure. Things like that. NA applications need to be much more precise than turbo. If the results are not what you want with turbo all you have to do is cram more air and fuel down its throat and it will make more power. This is not the case with NA because you CANT CRAM AIR. It has to be sucked in which requires efficiency of an engine system.
    85 Z31 6.0 LSX turbo 766whp/792wtq
    04 GTO, LS6, big cam, porting, N20… underway for summertime daily driver.
  • Russ84na
    Russ84na
    Senior Member
    • 700

    #25
    SATAN wrote:
    Building an NA engine is more of an art.
    I guess the woodworker in me finds more satisfaction in doing the job right.
    So basically what you are saying is that building a 300whp NA requires the same dollars and attention to detail as building a 700whp turbo.
    …and how much HP do you have at 0 boost
  • SATAN
    SATAN
    Senior Member
    • 6782

    #26
    [quote]Russ84na wrote:
    Originally posted by SATAN
    Building an NA engine is more of an art.
    I guess the woodworker in me finds more satisfaction in doing the job right.
    So basically what you are saying is that building a 300whp NA requires the same dollars and attention to detail as building a 700whp turbo.
    Nope, I would say building a 300whp VG30E requires MORE attention to detail than building a 700whp VG30ET. As far as cost, hmmm could be close. You dont have the $1000 for a turbo that you can put elsewhere.
    85 Z31 6.0 LSX turbo 766whp/792wtq
    04 GTO, LS6, big cam, porting, N20… underway for summertime daily driver.
  • Russ84na
    Russ84na
    Senior Member
    • 700

    #27
    [quote]SATAN wrote: [quote=Russ84na]
    Originally posted by SATAN
    Building an NA engine is more of an art.
    I guess the woodworker in me finds more satisfaction in doing the job right.
    So basically what you are saying is that building a 300whp NA requires the same dollars and attention to detail as building a 700whp turbo.
    Nope, I would say building a 300whp VG30E requires MORE attention to detail than building a 700whp VG30ET. As far as cost, hmmm could be close. You dont have the $1000 for a turbo that you can put elsewhere.
    I might, but I think I will need it for that extra 10 HP.
    …and how much HP do you have at 0 boost
  • phxZ31
    phxZ31
    Senior Member
    • 598

    #28
    I've been slowly building my NA up. I too hope to get past 200whp sometime. If I can't do it with the stock bottom, I'm gonna be looking at raising the compression with new pistons much like Russ is doing. I'm probably a year behind Russ though in terms of getting to the point where all thats left to do is a new bottom end. I still have many other important mods to get done before the compression becomes the limiting factor.
    1985 300ZX N/A -- Schneider Racing Cams + Valve Springs - U/R Underdrive Pulley - Ported/Polished Heads -
    MSA Headers - MGP Intake Manifold - K&N Air Filter - Electric Cooling Fan -
  • Ptowns
    Ptowns
    Member
    • 78

    #29
    Vg34e anybody? Or is this NA build limited to 3.0L I think as far as money, the vg33e bored out to fit q45 pistons, with some good cams, headers, intake, and a good tune would be my path to NA power. I want to do what I have just listed and drop it in a m30 with a 5spd. Just been having a hard time finding a cheap vg33e.
  • 92PathSE
    92PathSE
    Junior Member
    • 9

    #30
    I was really hoping to make over 200 whp on my NA, but after reading this thread maybe not. My VG30 spare(pathfinder) has about 15k miles on it so I don't want to replace anything in the bottom. I was just going to port the heads, change cams, and use a larger TB from a 240SX sohc or change out the whole manifold to one from a VG33, if that's possible. Megasquirt for fuel and spark. I'd be really happy with 150 on the pavement but I don't see it happening now.

    There's no room for a turbo and IC where they won't get damaged by rocks and stuff. Plus there would be miles of pipe.

    Thanks for the info :-D
    ----

    92 WD21 4x4 VG30 - in progress
    01 Pathfinder VQ35 - DD / For sale