It would likely not scale up to higher rpm (maybe no more than 5k) and waste a lot of power compare to even push rod, let alone chain or belt. It is likely going to cost more too.
It is called the Desmodromic valve system. Ducati motorcycles have used this arrangement for years. Some F1 engines use it also. It eliminates the potential of valve floating at high rpms. Because it uses a complicated gear train it can be noisy.
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Hondas S2000 engine has a partly gear drive. A very short cam chain drives a center gear. The gears are helical cut to reduce noise.
But, this was not good enough for Honda.
If you look cloesly at the cam shaft gears, you notice that they are assembeld of two parts, a thick and thin one. These are pre-loaded with a spring inside. (entangeld or interlocked? Wich one is the correct term?) Therefore, the gears mesh together without any play. There is no gear noise when the engine runs and the timing of the cams is very accurate.
gear drive everything works great on big rigs and saves roomGear driven cams.
Too many parts.
Too much noise.
Too expensive.
No practical performance or economy gain.
What's not to like?!?
For a daily driver it's a solution in search of a problem.
The complex gear-drive arrangement for the camshafts at the rear of the 24-cylinder Duesenberg. The pinion on the crankshaft had 17 teeth, the intermediate gears had 74 teeth, and the camshaft gears had 34 teeth. The center intermediate gear engaged an idler gear that had 45 teeth. The gearing drove the camshafts at half engine speed
Spring Loaded Scissor gear "AKA" Anti Backlash gear. Toyota used them on many, many DOHC Timing Belt engines.....But as one gear turned the other without a idler gear in the mix, Only one gear needed to be Anti Backlash.
You have to lock the gear down before removing a camshaft as it will literally JUMP out of there if you don't
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Crosley 4 cylinders had this config. My dad had Crosley outboard boat motors made by homelite, fisher-pearce, and bearcat that had the 90* shaft driven ohc.Yes, an overhead camshaft, driven by a shaft off the crank... something like these:
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I don't know of anything like this that made it into production, in an automotive application.
Mickey Mouse would approve (because of the shapes).
Didn’t GM use a phenolic plastic timing gear on the Iron Duke too? I think Toyota made a diesel V8 or I4 with a timing gear drive vs. a belt/chain.
Doesn't help that jt is very much a "fat guy in a little coat."The VW V10 TDI on the Touareg is a maintenance nightmare
I had one of those in a 1974 Mercury Capri. It was a great little engine and would take that little car up over 120mph many times over the few years I owned it.Hard act to follow. While not an overhead cam, certain Ford Cologne 2.8 V-6 OHV engines had a gear driven cam. They showed up in the Bronco II and Capri II as well as some other applications.
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The original specification for VW 504/507 was unsuitable for the V10 TDI, since it was a shear monster. So, at the intro of 504/507 there was a caveat saying the 5.0L V10 TDI and it's half size sibling the 2.5L R5 TDI were not suitable for 504/507, and advised to use a lower HTHS 506.01 instead.Doesn't help that jt is very much a "fat guy in a little coat."
Absolute beast of a motor though. Here's a fun thread where one of the gears in the timing cassette have up and the guy fixed it himself:
https://www.clubtouareg.com/threads...the-distribution-of-a-touareg-v10-frex.73289/
****. When I thought I saw carnage from a Honda V6 jumping time, this is something else. One of pics shows a cavity in the V-bank almost like a Ford 7.3/6.0/6.4L PSD(Navistar T444E/VT365/MaxxForce7). VW does cool stuff but I feel they complicate and engineer for engineering’s sake.Doesn't help that jt is very much a "fat guy in a little coat."
Absolute beast of a motor though. Here's a fun thread where one of the gears in the timing cassette have up and the guy fixed it himself:
https://www.clubtouareg.com/threads...the-distribution-of-a-touareg-v10-frex.73289/