So long story short of it is that I have been working on an F22b1 cylinder head fairly extensively. Come to find out, the f22a series head does NOT outflow the f22b1 until you surpass the .5 lift mark on your cam profile. Meaning, until you are balls deep into a build-the f22b1 is actually a better option. No arguing that the f22a carries a better valve angle and superior port design for top end performance.
Thing is, it isn't relevant until you pass the .5 lift point on your cam profile. Until that mark, the f22b1 outflows the f22a. The flowbench numbers don't lie. Sure, the overall performance potential is greater on the f22a-but hardly anyone runs a cam that hot that DD's an F22a.
The biggest grype about the b1 is in the intake manifold, which was designed about as thoughtfully as a shoe box.
Just thought it was worth pointing out since so many people discredit the f22b1 as a peformer since the "vtec" is for "Economy" not "performance"
The VTEC is a system, and the cam it powers is designed for economy. The cam can be replaced though, and the VTEC system remains desireable(in my eyes).
I have always thought the option of having more than one cam profile was interesting to me, intake side only or not. Especially when considering a turbo daily driver. With some head work and obviously some cam work, the f22b1 cylinder head can flow over 300cfm with very normal amounts of work when already considering a typical "port and polish" on the head.
There is a lot of information floating around on H-tech about the b1 as well. Surely isn't an h22, but it is a very strong performing engine that gets constantly smashed on the forum as being a "lesser" option or downgrade to the f22a.
Well, a bisi lvl 2 cam doesn't even hit a .5 lift so unless you are going balls deep into something serious, the f22b1 should be considered a pretty valid engine to build. Most builds on the forum NEVER run a cam hot enough to actually benefit from the superior port design and valve angle.
Thing is, it isn't relevant until you pass the .5 lift point on your cam profile. Until that mark, the f22b1 outflows the f22a. The flowbench numbers don't lie. Sure, the overall performance potential is greater on the f22a-but hardly anyone runs a cam that hot that DD's an F22a.
The biggest grype about the b1 is in the intake manifold, which was designed about as thoughtfully as a shoe box.
Just thought it was worth pointing out since so many people discredit the f22b1 as a peformer since the "vtec" is for "Economy" not "performance"
The VTEC is a system, and the cam it powers is designed for economy. The cam can be replaced though, and the VTEC system remains desireable(in my eyes).
I have always thought the option of having more than one cam profile was interesting to me, intake side only or not. Especially when considering a turbo daily driver. With some head work and obviously some cam work, the f22b1 cylinder head can flow over 300cfm with very normal amounts of work when already considering a typical "port and polish" on the head.
There is a lot of information floating around on H-tech about the b1 as well. Surely isn't an h22, but it is a very strong performing engine that gets constantly smashed on the forum as being a "lesser" option or downgrade to the f22a.
Well, a bisi lvl 2 cam doesn't even hit a .5 lift so unless you are going balls deep into something serious, the f22b1 should be considered a pretty valid engine to build. Most builds on the forum NEVER run a cam hot enough to actually benefit from the superior port design and valve angle.
Comment