Crowers DOHC VTEC Cams - Tech Review - Turbo Magazine

Street, strip, domestic, import, NASCAR, INDY... Crower makes a part for almost anything powered by a four-stroke gas engine. With a name like Crower Cams & Equipment, one would think they would have made a camshaft for the Honda market years ago. For your information, Crower has been regrinding cams for Hondas for quite some time, but what you didn't know was it has been designing a cam profile for VTEC enthusiasts that is chill-cast and Crower-spec. The big advantage--no core charge!

For about a year now, Crower has been dabbling in chill-cast replacement cams for Honda DOHC VTECs. One of the biggest hinderances to making a camshaft from scratch is matching the metal hardness to that of the factory camshafts. This is a very critical factor that must be achieved in order to prevent premature wear.

After a year of worn cam lobes and rocker arm lash pads, Crower has finally come up with a unit that has withstood the company's R&D torture tests. Ensuring the material is equivalent to the OEM material, Crower's R&D department bench-tested the cams days at a time, at different ranges of engine speeds. With the hard part out of the way, the R&D crew was ready to tackle the task of designing a grind superior to others on the market.

The foundation for the camshaft was based on the very popular Civic Si, so working in compliance with the dreadful OBD-II was a must in order to suit the needs of daily-driven racers. Crower advised us the camshafts reveal their best power with the company's titanium retainers, valve springs and cam sprockets.

Since Crower's test vehicle was a '99 Civic Si, we also used a '99 Civic Si as a test bed for the finished product. The vehicle was equipped with air intake, exhaust system and header, which baselined 144 hp and 106 lbs-ft of torque. With the basic upgrades complete, we augmented the Si with a set of Crower bumpsticks, springs and cam sprockets.

According to marketing director Brian Crower, "The camshafts make great power, but degreeing the cam to your specific application with a set of adjustable cam sprockets will reveal all the available power within the cams." We found this to be true on the dyno, when it came down to dialing in the right cam timing for our Si. Some information worth considering is timing differences from one car to another. Issues dealing with timing belt wear, milled heads or decked blocks can throw timing off a great deal, so our only way to fix this is to utilize adjustable cam sprockets. Fortunately for us, our Si had very low mileage. With the intake cam advanced 3 degrees and the exhaust at 1.5 degrees, we were able to extract 10.5 ponies out of the 1.6-liter. Considering most of the power was gained in the mid-range as well as the top-end, the Crower cams can generate plenty of power, if tuned right. In the end, the Civic hit a peak of 154.4 horsepower and 116.5 lbs-ft of torque.

A year in the making and Crower's new 63401 has passed the rigorous torture tests to invoke plenty of VTEC power. The best part about the whole deal is there is no core charge. Match these up with the rest of the Crower import arsenal and your Si should have plenty of kick-ass power.

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0104tur_cams23_zoom   |   Silence of the Cams

Camology 101
How To Read A Cam Card
Why the heck would you want to read a cam card?! Better yet, how do you read a cam card?! When you purchase a cam, a cam card is provided to help the installer understand more about the cam set-up. This usually gets thrown out with the box the cam came in, because most of the time the cam you purchased is a tried-and-true product. Since knowledge is power, we compiled the following cam card guidelines to help you better understand what it is you just purchased. This is vital information, because there is a lot more to a camshaft than lift and duration.

A: Intake & Exhaust Duration: This is measured in degrees of how long the valves are open. This number is rated at the camshaft and end result will be the same at the valve.

B: Intake & Exhaust Lift: This is measured in inches and in most cases this number refers to the valve lift and not cam lift. Valve lift is the measurement at the valve side of the rocker arm. This number is a calculation of cam lift with rocker ratio figured into the equation. (See D rocker ratio)

C: Intake & Exhaust Clearances: This is the recommended valve lash for these particular cams. The measurement is given in inches and the card explains that measurements should be done with the engine cold.

D: Rocker Ratio: The rocker ratio is the proportional relationship between measured lift at the cam and measured lift at the valve based on a rocker arms fulcrum point.

E: Duration @ .050: This is the U.S. standard of measurement. U.S.-spec cams are measured at .050 thousands of an inch.

F: Lobe Lift: This is the actual lift of the cam without the rocker ratio calculated into the equation. Cam lift is figured by measuring the cam from the tip of its ramp to the bottom of the base circle. Then measuring the base circle and subtracting the base circle measurement from the tip-to-base measurement.

G: Lobe Center: This is also referred to as lobe separation angle. Lobe center is measured in degree comparisons between the intake lobes and the exhaust lobes from the center of the camshaft. Since most imports are DOHC this number can be tailored with the use of cam sprockets. DOHC engines have two centers because of the use of two cams. Since changing the degrees on the cams can widen or shorten the lobe separation angle this number is often ignored. On single-cam engines this number is fixed since the intake and exhaust lobes are on the same shaft.

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