Dr.Jass
Pastor of Muppets
Gasket-matching is always a bad idea--unless you're going to carry the gasket's cross-sectional area all the way from the plenum in the intake to as far as the intake ports will allow. Any less than that, and you're simply setting up an area of port stall and a corresponding dip in flow. Think about it: All you accomplish by gasket-matching is creating a bulge in the port. Greater volume means a loss velocity, which then requires the mixture to re-accelerate toward the port. Port-match the smaller port to the larger one only. Don't worry about the gasket's port cross-section unless it intrudes into the port (in which case you obviously trim the gasket away). The small gap left by the gasket not being flush to the head/intake surfaces is aerodynamically inconsequential as it's below the port flow's boundary layer.
As I noted above, a smooth finish is not desirable when porting--that includes the exhaust ports. The desired finish is not "as cast" but rather stippled, and it has nothing to do with keeping a mixture in suspension--it's about efficient airflow. The pros smooth the port, then stipple it. John Baetchel bored me to tears yammering on about it for a couple hundred pages. His book about it was so redundant I'm surprised I didn't get two copies for the cover price. :doh:
As I noted above, a smooth finish is not desirable when porting--that includes the exhaust ports. The desired finish is not "as cast" but rather stippled, and it has nothing to do with keeping a mixture in suspension--it's about efficient airflow. The pros smooth the port, then stipple it. John Baetchel bored me to tears yammering on about it for a couple hundred pages. His book about it was so redundant I'm surprised I didn't get two copies for the cover price. :doh: