si21 wrote:Martin, dont mind if I call you that do you Petal

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Call me what, dearie?
I know the 24 valve pistons are supposed to be a much better quality piston, I assume from your remark about clashing valves means that this piston will give the engine a taller compression ratio.
They have a taller dome and no pockets (24v remember) where the 12v pistons have pockets and less of a dome. As for quality, I'm not sure there's anything in it really.
I realise this will give more power, however, I was thinking of using the standard pistons as they will leave the compression ration suitable for Super charging a little later down the line, I think the CR is 9.1 which I believe I read somewhere was ideal for super charging. Are the standard pistons really not up to it or was the change purley for reliability and to raise the CR?
Okay, some thermodynamics:
The amount of power an engine generates is in direct proportion to the amount of air/fuel it "breathes in". The
thermodynamic efficiency of the combustion process is directly related to how much the air/fuel mixture is compressed before ignition. This means that all other things being equal, you'll get more power from an engine with a higher compression ratio, as long as you don't go crazy and get problems with pre-ignition. The static compression ratio however is only a meaningful comparison between engines if the camshafts are the same... which they ain't.
For example, the static CR of the original Z7U is 8.6:1 and the DeLorean's NA odd-fire is 8.8:1. These figures mean very little because the camshafts make all the difference and are very different/conservative on the Z7U.
The 12v 3 litre pistons are very thin at the crown - about 2mm IIRC.
All that said, the specific output of the 3 litre PRVs is pretty poor and there are guys in the US who have successfully turbocharged their 3 litres (with even lower CR to start with) to about 8psi with no failures.
whats the difference between the 2,5 lump is it bore as well as stroke? or just crank and rods, I am assuming the pistons can't be used ?
PRV Bores come in 3 flavours - 88, 91 and 93mm
Stroke comes in two flavours - 63 and 73mm
Rods and wrist pins are different between odd and even fire.
88 bore, 73 stroke = 2664cc (early odd-fires only)
91 bore, 73 stroke = 2849cc (all the 2.8s both odd and even)
93 bore, 73 stroke = 2975cc (all are even fire 3 litres)
91 bore, 63 stroke = 2458cc (2.5 turbo)
not sure that I would want to go Adaptronic though TBH hence the even fire choice of power plant. I dont want to be limited as to who can work with the ECU and have to travel the length and breadth of the country to do so.
Things have changed a lot since the "early days". Lee's gone down a path with them and has several successful setups under his belt. I *personally* went a different way because I really wanted to avoid using a trigger wheel because the DeLorean has really limited space around the crank pulley and it screams "aftermarket" and the DeLorean crowd always want stuff to look "original" even if it ain't. The Adaptronic is the only ECU that can be triggered by the original sensor and flywheel (the flywheel trigger pattern requires a small modification). Rottbott did (I believe) around 20,000 miles on his setup before he sold it.
Adaptronic themselves have come along in leaps and bounds and their software now offers tons of features that weren't available originally. This includes the superb "Tuning by Volumetric Efficiency" which allows a driveable, useable fuel map to be set up in under 1 minute.
You really can do a hell of a lot of this stuff yourself and just spend a day on the rollers to get things perfect. I recently found a great engineering firm with all the proper kit and experience and a complete lack of bright coloured paint and cars with daft spoilers outside

To be honest I dont want to spend any money on the engine thats in there. The plan was to maybe just rebuild a standard 3ltr EF, lump do the rings bearings gaskets seals etc and just make it reliable and leak free, since the heads were coming off maybe a little fettling maybe some valve seats and a quick clean up if thats possible,
I'd say buy a running car with no MOT and whip the engine out. no rebuild necessary.
200bhp is only 68 bhp per tonne surely that must be acheivable without too much problem on a 3ltr ?
You meant 168hp/tonne. Your best bet is to see how Lee's comes together. I reckon my "mix'n'match" suggestion would hit 200.
My actual question is what can I expect to get out of a Saffrane/Laguna lump which is been de-catted, 3 branch manifolds and system, standard inlet manifold and run by a modded GTA inj ECU?
Somewhere between 170 and 200 I reckon
