I've heard that story about "Mopar cam grinds" too. Probably here. I decided to believe it then, but now? Why not see if we can find out if it's really true?
First though: Ratio rockers! They are the bomb, aren't they?
I started thumbing through cam grind pages and, sure enough—consensus is the 1.4 and 1.5 rocker kits and the associated cam grinds (FK series from Engle, etc.) are what the cool kids use now. And, as Danny points out, the "big" cams used with those are very similar to stock (or like 110) cams in terms of lift. These cam profiles give much more lift but not so much duration as the previous generation's "hot street" grinds.
So I started looking around at rocker arm designs....
Turns out all the 'murcan V8s from the 1960s used 1.5 to 1.7 ratio rockers. The 194 ci L6 that came originally in my '67 Nova also used a 1.7 rocker ratio as stock.
That seems to be the correct range for a pushrod OHV engine, doesn't it?
So why did Ferdie make our engines with a 1.1:1 rocker ratio?*
And also: why would muscle-era Mopars (of all things) set the standard for hot rod VW camshafts?
I DON'T KNOW.
But I may have found a clue.
That, friends, is an early (as in, 1950s, "Red Ram" era) Chrysler Hemi rocker arm set.
Looks just a bit like
Now, I don't know what the rocker ratio was on those early hemis. I've been researching it...no one says. But just by looking I think it's closer to 1.5:1 than 1:1.
So maybe not.
But...maybe?
Because the other thing the early Hemi engines shared with the Type 1 was low compression ratios. That was a deliberate decision by Chrysler's engine boss, who thought GM and other manufacturers were getting cheeky with their high compression engines and concomitant dependence on high octane fuel.
"He reasoned that relying on external factors like high-octane gas (the 'stimulants') would spell disaster if fuel shortages ever materialized and only low octane was available—which is what happened in the early 1970s with OPEC," according to the linked article, which also covers some of the Hemi's (and Chrysler's) post-war history. Turns out the hemi head shape was not that important after all, but the valve arrangement (as with the Four Cam engines) was.
The '50s and '60s hot cam grinds all showcased increased duration more than lift, and recommended higher compression ratios too. It's only that past 25-30 years that higher lift/less duration came into fashion. And by then stock engine compression ratios were already going up into the double digits—probably owing mainly to modern computerized spark timing and fuel delivery, and ubiquitous knock sensors.
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*Could it have been something to do with the designed length of the aluminum push rods? The expected strength of them circa 1940?