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HIGH PERFORMANCE & OEM CYLINDER HEADS We
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Cylinder
Heads
In
an internal combustion engine, the cylinder head sits atop the cylinders
and consists of a platform containing part of the combustion chamber
and the location of the valves and spark plugs. In a flathead engine,
the mechanical parts of the valve train are all contained within
the block, and the head is essentially a flat plate of metal bolted
to the top of the cylinder bank with a head gasket in between; this
simplicity leads to ease of manufacture and repair, and accounts
for the flathead engine's early success in production automobiles
and continued success in small engines, such as lawnmowers. This
design, however, requires the incoming air to flow through a convoluted
path, which limits the ability of the engine to perform at higher
rpm, leading to the adoption of the overhead valve head design.
In
the overhead valve head, the top half of the cylinder head contains
the camshaft in an overhead cam engine, or another mechanism (such
as rocker arms and pushrods) to transfer rotational mechanics from
the crankshaft to linear mechanics to operate the valves (pushrod
engines perform this conversion at the camshaft lower in the engine
and use a rod to push a rocker arm that acts on the valve). Internally
the cylinder head has passages called ports for the fuel/air mixture
to travel to the inlet valves from the intake manifold, for exhaust
gases to travel from the exhaust valves to the exhaust manifold,
and for antifreeze to cool the head and engine.
The
number of cylinder heads in an engine is a function of the engine
configuration. A straight engine has only one cylinder head. A V
engine usually has two cylinder heads, one at each end of the V,
although Volkswagen, for instance, produces a V6 called the VR6,
where the angle between the cylinder banks is so narrow that it
utilizes a single head. A boxer engine has two heads.
The
cylinder head is key to the performance of the internal combustion
engine, as the shape of the combustion chamber, inlet passages and
ports (and to a lesser extent the exhaust) determines a major portion
of the volumetric efficiency and compression ratio of the engine.