Piledriver wrote:Over 8:1 DCR, plan on running premium, if lucky, unless you have very special combustion chambers, or are running E85 or propane etc.
Under ~6.5, a turbo had best be in your plans.
I'll say this one more time: the above quote was out of context, missing one critical piece of information: valve timing. You cannot say anything about CR or octane requirement without knowing the valve opening and closing events, in other words, know the CAM.
Then add what you know about the chambers and deck height etc.. they have a noticeable effect, but nothing near as dramatic as the cam profile.
9:1 would cook the engine if it had a stock cam, but if it had a race cam, the engine would not run properly because it had too LITTLE CR.
6.something :1 is too low for most applications, and yes it does sound like a good turbo CR for a mild cam. But you can also build a turbo engine with 9:1 CR, if the cam was wild enough. It would allow pressure to leak past open valves during the early stages of compression stroke.
CR is just the theoretical ratio for IF you had both valves closed all through the compression stroke, and no lossses anywhere.
an