Originally Posted by: HK1837 226 hp SAE gross would be less than 200hp net, not more!
HJ 253 didn't get a smaller cam, the engine was identical to HQ. It was the 308 that got revised. The HX 253 got the smaller cam. The book you have has the HJ release figures and they didn't change them despite the 308 being better. They were all revised mid HJ, they all went down to more realistic figures but the 308 went up.
The export HX engines are the same engines fitted to HJ in 1974. There was a small change in 1/75 to seal the fuel bowl and seal the idle screws. For whatever reason GMH changed the HJ engine figures for HJ release in internal documents but didn't put it in public documents (like owners manuals) until later in 1975. A cynic might say they tried to talk the bulk of the engines down to make the HX engines look better on paper than they were.
Cam is bigger, end of story. The same cam grind was used in all SBC's in 1968-9 up to 300hp regardless of the compression. It was used in 8.5:1 up to 10:1 engines. The HJ cam was not used as the engine had more compression or they would have revised the cam back again when the 308 dropped to 9.4 then 9.2 and again even lower at 304 introduction and then again in VL. the cam is an optimised cam for the 308, not a compromise like the 5deg retarded 253 cam.
That GTS350 test is the nobbled GST350. This is what I've been talking about. True total figures were never obtained, only those by Mel Nichols and Peter Robinson on HG's and this is why they were both so surprised after having driven the cars GMH supplied during HT. The lack of a full test was why AMC mag did it as the car they used was a time capsule, and the AMC tests were done identically to how they were done in the day, with two drivers, full tank and throttle lift shifts. The figures are averages of multiple runs.
Yes you are correct 226HP must be the Net HP figures.
The book is 60 years of Holden that I am looking at page 67
253 HX 161HP at 4550 / 240LB at 2600RPM and the export non ADR27A is 175HP at 4800RPM / 240lb at 3000.
The HT-T-G-Q-J 253 is rated at 185HP at 4400 / 262LB at 2400.
The Max Ellery book says smaller cam from HJ 253, I am just going by the books here mind and I like that we can view into such matters, because I like to look for the truth in all things, arguments don't bother me at all.
Maybe you are correct in that the HJ 253 cam is the same as the HQ, but I was thinking that Holden would not like to quote less power if it was true.
By having that HX 253 type cam spec it looks about right as to what figures would happen with that spec, with the EGR and non EGR. and it's a pollution cam, the exhaust timing proves just that, as it's trying to make more heat in the exhaust to burn off some more of the unburnt fuel.
The HJ-X-Z cam does the same thing, when you understand the spec, and the Chev cam has noting to do with that chev cam at all, when one puts up the spec of lets say 20/60 at 0.006 and another 3 different cams state totally the same spec, that does no mean that they are, even if they have the same lift and even if the have the same centreline.
I think Holden timing starts it's spec from 0.002 and If one plots the lobe at from 0.002 well that's very vague, some after market cams spec is set at 0.004 but most were at 0.006 years ago but they got rid of that spec for a 0.050 standard nowadays as a reference point, now we could go and plot it all the way up to max lift and find differences, some have a wider nose and others a narrow one. to say that the HJ 308 cam is the same as the Chev is just nonsense, even the lift is different.
When they upped the compression in the 308 HJ, it looks as they are trying to keep the Dynamic compression the same as the 308 HQ due to that loss caused by that cam, and the HX-Z, VB and so forth lower compression is just tuned to suit the evolution.
The HT-G-Q cam could not cut it with ADR27A laws and beyond.
As I pointed out once before, if you know how to drive a stock 350 GTS V8 over 1/4 or to 100mph you can get your times down to put fear into a more powerful car like a GT-HO but after that 100mph you don't have a hope in hell of keeping up.
We could of got the higher spec 350 chev in the HT-G and you would find the same thing, but they did not go that far, maybe if the XU-1 did not come out Holden may of used the more powerful 350 to match the Phase 2 and 3.
The HG GTS-HO 350 Monaro and the HQ GTS-HO 350 Monaro, but well the ALP lost the plot and canned all that from happing.
Look at the GTR Torana as to the work done on that engine being hotted up and then look at the XU-1, the XU-1 is much like the GT-HO as far as a hotted up engine goes and a HK-T-G 327 350 is much like a GTR and GT spec hot up spec.