Marky Dissod
Full Access Member
Purpose of quench, especially in a wedge combustion chamber, is to enhance mixture motion.So you are saying that the thicker head gasket, reducing quench/compression,
will be less efficient at keeping the engine from detonation,
and therefore require higher octane to compensate for the increased chance of detonation,
if I am understanding you correctly.
During the squeeze, the 'flat' area of the piston rises to nearly meet the 'flat' area of the head.
They may not be truly flat, they're shaped so that combustion canNOT take place in those areas.
They instead push the air/fuel mixture toward the largest part of the combustion chamber in motion like bellows.
The further apart the 'flats' are, the less mixture motion is induced.
Other ways to avoid ping / knock are to choose the cam carefully, to write the spark tables carefully,
to choose the correct octane, and to achieve finer fuel atomization, which GM combined with more quench.
Compare the Gen5 pistons to the Gen4 pistons, then compare the Gen4 pistons to the Gen3 pistons.
As the piston chamber has evolved, so has the static compression ratio.