Ahhhh... modified intake VVT pulley. At the top it says the 296 cams will work OK
without VVT, which is another way of saying they won't work nicely with the stock
VVT pulley. TODA and others sell adjustable intake cam pulleys to eliminate the VVT
altogether on high duration cams.
Setting the cam timing at a fixed advance works OK on race engines where smooth
off-idle performance is not important. But if long duration cams are used on a DD
then the TEC-VVT pulley mod might save the driver some embarrassment when
negotiating the car park at the mall
Quite a few years ago I did come across an article where someone modified the
internals of a factory VVT pulley by inserting a pin to restrict or change the range
of advance provided by the pulley. Can't find the article again and don't remember
the outcome.
Basically, the OEM VVT is optimised to work with OEM cams on a stock engine. As
soon as the cams are changed all bets are off
unless the car has a programmable
ECU. Then VVT operation can be dyno tuned to work in harmony with all other mods.
Even then the VVT is more likely to just be a nuisance as it is either ON or OFF and
that limits its usefulness. Modern engines use VVTi (usually on both cams) where cam
advance curves can be programmed into the ECU. That works better than OK
cheers... jondee86