We do know that. Every race engine builder under the sun knows that. Set your piston to head clearance too close at ambient and you’ll crash the piston into the head. I’ve seen it. I’ve also see the witness marks on piston and head to know it was absolutely on the limit. We literally build engines this way creeping up to this. We can run FEA and all that but we have no way of verifying / correlating it without a massive investment in instrumentation that it’s just easier to use progressively thinner head gaskets. Race engine builders have been doing it this for 50+ years.AR3-GP wrote: ↑15 Feb 2026, 23:05We don't know that. While the rods may stretch at 12,000 RPM, if the head expands then it may compensate for the rod stretch. If one intended to remain under 16:1 at all times, that is what you would do.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑15 Feb 2026, 23:02If the engines measure at 16:1 at ambient, which I suspect all do, then none are legal at 12,000rpm in a firing engine.
Over the last 55 pages of this thread, it’s clear you haven’t built an engine or know engine building. I have / I do, and at a pretty competitive level. Just stop.
