Honda pioneered road car-used VVT in the late 80s by launching its famous
VTEC system (Valve Timing Electronic Control). First appeared in Civic, CRX
and NS-X, then became standard in most models.
You can see it as 2 sets of cams having different shapes to enable different
timing and lift. One set operates during normal speed, say, below 4,500 rpm.
Another substitutes at higher speed. Obviously, such layout does not allow
continuous change of timing, therefore the engine performs modestly below
4,500 rpm but above that it will suddenly transform into a wild animal.

This system does improve peak power - it can raise red line to nearly 8,000
rpm (even 9,000 rpm in S2000), just like an engine with racing camshafts,
and increase top end power by as much as 30 hp for a 1.6-litre engine !!
However, to exploit such power gain, you need to keep the engine boiling at
above the threshold rpm, therefore frequent gear change is required. As
low-speed torque gains too little (remember, the cams of a normal engine
usually serves across 0-6,000 rpm, while the "slow cams" of VTEC engine
still need to serve across 0-4,500 rpm), drivability won't be too
impressive. In short, cam-changing system is best suited to sports cars.

Honda has already improved its 2-stage VTEC into 3 stages for some models.
Of course, the more stage it has, the more refined it becomes. It still
offers less broad spread of torque as other continuously variable systems.
However, cam-changing system remains to be the most powerful VVT, since no
other system can vary the Lift of valve as it does.

Honda's latest 3-stage VTEC has been applied in Civic sohc engine in Japan.
The mechanism has 3 cams with different timing and lift profile. Note that
their dimensions are also different - the middle cam (fast timing, high
lift), as shown in the above diagram, is the largest; the right hand side
cam (slow timing, medium lift) is medium sized ; the left hand side cam
(slow timing, low lift) is the smallest.

This mechanism operate like this :

Stage 1 ( low speed ) : the 3 pieces of rocker arms moves independently.
Therefore the left rocker arm, which actuates the left inlet valve, is
driven by the low-lift left cam. The right rocker arm, which actuates the
right inlet valve, is driven by the medium-lift right cam. Both cams' timing
is relatively slow compare with the middle cam, which actuates no valve now.

Stage 2 ( medium speed ) : hydraulic pressure (painted orange in the
picture) connects the left and right rocker arms together, leaving the
middle rocker arm and cam to run on their own. Since the right cam is larger
than the left cam, those connected rocker arms are actually driven by the
right cam. As a result, both inlet valves obtain slow timing but medium
lift.

Stage 3 ( high speed ) : hydraulic pressure connects all 3 rocker arms
together. Since the middle cam is the largest, both inlet valves are
actually driven by that fast cam. Therefore, fast timing and high lift are
obtained in both valves.

Another example - Nissan Neo VVL
Very similar to Honda's system, but the right and left cams are with the
same profile. At low speed, both rocker arms are driven independently by
those slow-timing, low-lift right and left cams. At high speed, 3 rocker
arms are connected together such that they are driven by the fast-timing,
high-lift middle cam.
You might think it must be a 2-stage system. No, it is not. Since Nissan Neo
VVL duplicates the same mechanism in the exhaust camshaft, 3 stages could be
obtained in the following way:

Stage 1 (low speed) : both intake and exhaust valves are in slow
configuration.
Stage 2 (medium speed) : fast intake configuration + slow exhaust
configuration.
Stage 3 (high speed) : both intake and exhaust valves are in fast
configuration.


Ken






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