by gofaster » Mon Dec 19, 2005 12:07 pm
This is interesting. At 10" of depression on the old SF-110, sucking clay out of the port has not been much of an issue for me.
Several years ago I found some clay at a craft shop that is non drying. The clay hasn't gotten hard yet. The labels are gone now, so that is all I know about it. Once the new bench is done, I'll find out if it still stays put at higher depressions.
For entry radii, I use polycarbonate, acrylic and delrin for rectangular and irregular ports. For round Harley ports, I have a very short velocity stack sort of thing (with a very generous radius) so I can tighten the manifold clamps/bolts to secure it. Testing at 10", the difference between clay, my short stack, and a radiused entry that I cobbled out of an old H-D manifold were negligible when I tested them all on the same head. That in itself surprised me as I expected a gain with the short stack/radius entry.
I like using the solid fabricated entry radii over clay because I know that every head of a particular type that I test is presented to the bench in the same way.
Jim