Looks like they’ve been converted to solid by others – but my concern is the diaptre one would need to grind on the face of the tappet to work with an appropriate cam, if that would leave enough material on the face to be safe, and how hard one would need to treat them.
Well, maybe the buckets are more substantial than I thought.
The face is .088, the sides, .033.
midget,
R-E-L-A-X. and not just about your dam* Packers. (BTW, they deserved to win. Bears are undisciplined AND poorly coached . . . . so much so, I'm done for the year.)
Mark's rule #3 or #5, whatever, is:
DO NOT RE-INVENT THE WHEEL!!!We should use solid, Cosworth style, inverted bucket tappets for the following reasons:
1) It is simple.
2) It is lighter than modifying the stock hydraulic followers, permitting use of lighter valve springs @ higher rpm.
(The target peak bhp rpm will NOT be 10,000 rpm, but I want to engineer valve-train reliability up to 10K/10.5K, since I watched the video of your 126 mph run.)
3) You can "get away" with "flat tappets" because with 4 valves per cylinder, (and 8 ports . . . ) the cam grind does not have to be as "intense" as it was for the "Grenade".
(WHICH I WOULD LIKE TO POINT OUT, WAS NOT . . . .)
4) Reducing the base circle diameter of the cam lobes is probably the ONLY way to increase valve lift, since the valve seat to cam centerline dimension is "fixed".
I doubt that this will be an issue, because with 4 valves per cylinder, "massive" lift will NOT be required.
There are a couple of different permutations of this style. One uses a short inner "stem" or "post" in the tappet to replace the hydraulic adjuster mechanism. The other uses a short tappet stem combined with "long stem" valves. I'm not sure which one might be in use for K's, but we should check on what is available from REC and Piper in the UK. Both styles utilize a "top hat" style shim in between the valve stem and the tappet as the method to adjust the valve clearance.
AND, yes, adjusting the valve clearance is a "PITA", just as on Cosworths, Lotus TwinCams, or any other twin OHC race prepped engine. Just the way it is, embrace and accept it.
The plan should still be to measure what we need to and gather the information. Then start making decisions and ordering parts.
This "journey" will be different, no blind spots, eyes open all the way.

Kufupandaboy
I guess I need to start working on the simulations for output, eh? ?