Lobe Separation Angle Calculator
Calculate camshaft timing events and analyze valve overlap
Peak lift point of intake lobe (typically 102-114°)
Peak lift point of exhaust lobe (typically 110-122°)
Positive = advanced, Negative = retarded. Typical: 2-4° advance for street
What Is Lobe Separation Angle (LSA)?
Lobe Separation Angle (LSA) is the angle in degrees between the peak of the intake lobe and the peak of the exhaust lobe on a camshaft.
In simple terms:
- It controls how much the intake and exhaust valves overlap.
- It affects idle quality, vacuum, torque curve, and peak power.
- It changes how aggressive or smooth the engine feels.
LSA is usually between 100° and 120° in most performance engines.
Why LSA Matters
LSA directly changes how an engine behaves.
Tight LSA (104°–106°)
- More valve overlap
- Rough idle
- Strong mid-range power
- Popular in oval track and aggressive NA builds
Moderate LSA (108°–112°)
- Balanced idle and performance
- Strong street performance
- Common in muscle cars
Wide LSA (114°–116°+)
- Less overlap
- Smoother idle
- Better for forced induction (turbo or supercharged)
- Stable vacuum
The calculator classifies the result so you can quickly see where your cam falls.
How the Lobe Separation Angle Calculator Works
The calculator has three modes:
- Calculate LSA from Centerlines
- Calculate from Duration and Timing Events
- Calculate Valve Overlap from Known LSA
Let’s break them down.
1. Calculate LSA from Lobe Centerlines
If you already know:
- Intake Lobe Centerline (ATDC)
- Exhaust Lobe Centerline (BTDC)
The formula is:
LSA = (Intake CL + Exhaust CL) ÷ 2
Example
- Intake CL = 106°
- Exhaust CL = 114°
LSA = (106 + 114) ÷ 2 = 110°
That’s a strong street-performance LSA.
2. Calculate LSA from Duration and Timing Events
If you know:
- Intake Duration at 0.050″
- Exhaust Duration at 0.050″
- Intake Opening (BTDC)
- Exhaust Closing (ATDC)
The calculator finds the intake and exhaust centerlines first.
Formulas Used
Intake CL = (Intake Duration ÷ 2) − Intake Opening
Exhaust CL = (Exhaust Duration ÷ 2) − Exhaust Closing
LSA = (Intake CL + Exhaust CL) ÷ 2
This method is helpful when reading cam cards or degreeing a cam during installation.
3. Calculate Valve Overlap
Valve overlap happens when:
- Intake valve opens
- Exhaust valve has not fully closed
Overlap affects idle quality and cylinder scavenging.
The calculator uses:
Overlap = (Intake Duration ÷ 2) + (Exhaust Duration ÷ 2) − (LSA × 2)
More overlap usually means:
- Rougher idle
- Stronger high RPM power
- Lower vacuum
Less overlap means:
- Smooth idle
- Better drivability
- Stronger low-end torque
Cam Installed Advance Explained
The calculator also accounts for installed advance.
Installed advance changes where the cam sits relative to the crankshaft.
- Positive number = cam advanced
- Negative number = cam retarded
Typical street engines use 2° to 4° advance.
Advancing the cam:
- Increases low-end torque
- Moves power band lower
Retarding the cam:
- Improves high RPM power
- Moves power band higher
The tool shows:
- Original centerlines
- Effective centerlines after advance
- Ground-in cam advance
This helps when degreeing a cam properly.
LSA Classification Guide
The calculator automatically classifies LSA values:
| LSA Range | Category | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|
| Below 104° | Extremely Tight | Racing only |
| 104°–106° | Tight | Oval track |
| 106°–108° | Moderately Tight | Performance |
| 108°–112° | Moderate | Street |
| 112°–114° | Moderately Wide | Cruiser |
| 114°–116° | Wide | Turbo/Supercharged |
| 116°+ | Extremely Wide | Pro Stock |
This quick classification helps match the cam to the engine application.
Real-World Example
Let’s say you enter:
- Intake Duration: 230°
- Exhaust Duration: 236°
- Intake Opening: 15° BTDC
- Exhaust Closing: 15° ATDC
The calculator will:
- Compute intake and exhaust centerlines
- Calculate LSA
- Determine overlap
- Show cam advance
- Classify the cam
Within seconds, you get a full camshaft timing analysis.
Who Should Use a Lobe Separation Angle Calculator?
This tool is ideal for:
- Engine builders
- Camshaft designers
- Performance tuners
- Drag racers
- Oval track racers
- Street performance enthusiasts
- DIY mechanics degreeing a cam
If you are installing a cam or comparing cam specs, this tool saves time and prevents math mistakes.
Common Mistakes When Calculating LSA
- Mixing BTDC and ATDC values
- Forgetting to divide duration by 2
- Ignoring installed advance
- Using advertised duration instead of duration at 0.050″
- Confusing intake and exhaust centerlines
The calculator reduces these errors.
How to Get the Best Results
- Always use duration at 0.050″
- Double-check timing events
- Confirm your cam card specs
- Measure centerlines accurately when degreeing
- Match LSA to engine compression and intended use
Remember, LSA alone does not determine performance. It works together with:
- Duration
- Lift
- Compression ratio
- Cylinder head flow
- Exhaust system
- RPM range
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