I'm confused, (almost my natural state)
Looking through Harley's 2018 accessory catalogue and noticed the specs for the M8 cams.
While I know there are many factors, the basic old school thinking was that for a Torque cam you'd have an early Intake closing to give higher compression and therefore more bang and for a Power cam a later closing which sometimes means adding higher compression pistons to keep the squish. I know there are other factors, lift, duration, LSA, overlap etc but the Intake closing, (so I thought) was the biggest factor.
Harley says the stock M8 (and they don't specify which one, 107, 114 or 117) has an Intake closing of 1 degree ABDC, so wow that's almost a full compression stroke.
The old TC HO 103 I believe closed the Intake at 30 Degrees ABDC, so for more torque you might install the SE255 cam with .045 more lift but importantly an earlier intake closing of 25 degrees giving you an extra 5 degrees squish over stock.
With the new M8 cams, they've specified later Intake closing times over stock. 17 degrees ABDC for the Torque cam and from 24 to 45 for power versions.
Does anyone know why the old rules (ok guidelines) wouldn't apply to the four valve M8s?
Here are some more pics, testing from HDForumsThe test mule was a 2017 Road Glide Special with a 107 ci. engine. The only mods were the stock exhaust was decatted and the left pipe was ground to the radius of the collector where it extended into main collector with Fullsac 2” cores in stock muffler cans and using an Arlen Ness Stage 1 Big Sucker air cleaner.The cams that were tested were the SE8 462, CR460, RS468, WM8-22x, TTS 100, and the TTS 150.
Oh dear that's no filling me with confidence in them, yes I did tell them. I guess it must be the 447 as that is the only torque cam.