60# springs have almost the exact same pressure over the nose of the cam as the stock springs........crazy. I have no idea why these have been used for performance springs for so long. The reason they have the higher seat pressure but almost identical pressure over the nose is to control reversion from higher backpressure associated with exhaust brakes. 60# springs fix this but do absolutely nothing for controlling valves at higher lifts and higher rpm's. The other issue is the fact that the factory retainer weighs almost 44grams. Even if you go with Ti retainers they weigh 24 grams. Our weigh in at 11 grams. Combine the ultra light retainers and locks with the extra 15-20 grams savings in the beehive design, harmonic cancellations of the beehive springs, and enough seat pressure to keep the valves in check and you are ready for some rpm, boost and very aggressive cam profiles. If you are running larger valves, high boost pressures acting on the larger surface area of the valve forcing it open and causing reversion, and valve float caused by additional mass, something better than 60# (actually 150#) is necessary.
here is a study I did a while back:
I did some research a while back on mass of the valvetrain vs. seat pressure. This takes into account the weight of the tappets,pushrod,rocker, valve spring, locks and valves, as well as cross heads. What it does not account for is rocker ratio, nose pressure vs. mass, or acceleration rates. I'm working on the equations to factor these in, but for now basic mass vs. seat pressure is a good place to start. Remember the 12v engines have much higher lift and higher rocker ratio. 12v int 1.62-1.69 Exh. 1.66-1.688 opposed to 24v and CR which are int. 1.37-1.39 and exh. approx 1.34. (you can measure six different ones and get six different readings on 12v or 24v), which stresses the valve train much more in a 12v.
All measurements are in grams/seat pressure in LBS.
24v int.stock 4.67 F1 4.02 HD 3.4 exh. stock 5.14 F1 4.42 HD3.74
CR int.stock 4.75 F1 4.09 HD 3.45 exh. stock 5.22 F1 4.49 HD3.8
note: exh has more mass due to larger rocker arms
CR has more mass due to larger tappets
12 Valve w/ stock valves
int. stock 7.9 w/60Lb springs 4.34 exh. stock 8.5 w/60lb springs 4.62
12 valve with Haisley's Larger valves
int.stock 8.325 w/60lb springs 4.44 exh.stock8.76 w/60lb springs 4.67
As you can see 60lb. springs have about the same weight to pressure as stock 24 valve springs. What makes this worse is that 12valves have higher rocker ratios which have greater acceleration and higher lift. The greater acceleration creates obvious problems. The main issue with these springs is that with greater lift the 60lb spring does not have a high enough spring rate to control the valve on the nose of the cam. Pressure does not rise nearly fast enough to control the valve train. The 60lb. spring was designed to work better with applications where higher back pressures occur (engines with Exh. brakes) It affects seat pressure mainly and doesn't take into account higher lift cams greater acceleration rates or 5000rpm street trucks. Remember that at high lift 60 lb springs have the same pressure as stock springs. With this in mind, it is hard to believe there has not been a better spring developed to control the valves. Most people that want better springs usually end up going with double or triple small block springs which require expensive machining of the head, and create enormous spring pressures.
I hope you are not cross eyed at this point, I just wanted to give you some of my observations, and case for better springs.
And a little more
12v spring info. - Competition Diesel.Com - Bringing The BEST Together
Zach