Wow...awesome news. I had not read the new Fasttrack. It's about time we can use the flat-tops, the dished pistons are f*****g pathetic for a racecar.
The valves have been legal for the GT for a couple of years, a bunch of us had written to the BOD to get them legalized. For comparison, a stock 1.9 head flows about 88 cfm on the intake ports. With legal ITB prep work, I get them to about 92-94 cfm. With the 2.0 intake valves, it improves again to about 100-101 cfm.
All in all it adds substantial power to an otherwise restricted engine. The trick is to add the legal replacement valve seats (I use L-Joy intake and exhaust seats). The throat area is far larger, and with a 3-angle carbide seat cutter, the bowl area opens substantially and improves the airflow. Opels have fairly large ports compared to the valve area, so larger valves DO help the airflow here.
As you may know, Opel used gross hp ratings in the late '60's. So those 102 hp ratings on the early engines are overated. They are rated at 90 ps in Europe (about 88 hp). But I have found them to be closer to 82-85 hp in reality (at the flywheel).
With correct mods, 110-115 'real' hp is achievable. Mill head for 9.5:1 compression, use Total Seal rings, proper valve job with the bigger intake valves, 'Euro' camshaft, properly selected intake manifold, 32/26 Weber, and a good header....this will get the car competitive.
Bob
The valves have been legal for the GT for a couple of years, a bunch of us had written to the BOD to get them legalized. For comparison, a stock 1.9 head flows about 88 cfm on the intake ports. With legal ITB prep work, I get them to about 92-94 cfm. With the 2.0 intake valves, it improves again to about 100-101 cfm.
All in all it adds substantial power to an otherwise restricted engine. The trick is to add the legal replacement valve seats (I use L-Joy intake and exhaust seats). The throat area is far larger, and with a 3-angle carbide seat cutter, the bowl area opens substantially and improves the airflow. Opels have fairly large ports compared to the valve area, so larger valves DO help the airflow here.
As you may know, Opel used gross hp ratings in the late '60's. So those 102 hp ratings on the early engines are overated. They are rated at 90 ps in Europe (about 88 hp). But I have found them to be closer to 82-85 hp in reality (at the flywheel).
With correct mods, 110-115 'real' hp is achievable. Mill head for 9.5:1 compression, use Total Seal rings, proper valve job with the bigger intake valves, 'Euro' camshaft, properly selected intake manifold, 32/26 Weber, and a good header....this will get the car competitive.
Bob