Rod length comments
It's not so much the overall rod length as it is the RATIO of rod length to stroke. The higher the ratio (generally) the more peak power.
There are some circumstances where a short rod (ratio~1. 5-1. 7) will make more power. They generally make more torque at lower rpm.
Longer rods (ratio 1. 7 and up) favor higher rpm hp. NASCAR engines run ratios of around 1. 8.
It's interesting to compare the rod ratios of common v-8s:
Chevy 350:1. 63
MOpar 340:1. 85
mopar 383:1. 88
Chevy 454: 1. 53
Ford 302:1. 69
Ford 351W:1. 7
Ford 351C:1. 65
All things considered, if a CTD rod is ~7. 5 inches long, then the rod ratio comes in at ~(7. 5/4. 72=) 1. 58, which is fairly short.
Also, remember that the higher the ratio, the less effect a difference in ratio has. For example, the jump from a 1. 4 to a 1. 5 ratio is a large difference. The increase from a 1. 8 to a 1. 9 ratio is almost nothing. Even though both cases the ratio difference was only . 1, it had a different effect.
You can easily visualize this by picturing the angularity of the rod with the crank at 90°. Hypothetically, it might be at a 17° angle from vertical (rod to bore centerline). To cut this angle to 16° we would have to make the rod longer by a given amount. To make the angle 15° we would have to make it longer by a greater amount than before. Even an infinitely long rod won't make the angle zero. Since this is an exponential relationship, you can see where longer rods QUICKLY become a point of diminishing returns.
SO what Vaughn said is right about long rods (more accurately, high rod ratios). But the CTD doesn't have a high ratio because of it's long stroke. It's all about the rod angularity, and the rod length and stroke both determine this value.
More specifically regarding Vaughn's post:
1)cylinder wall loading is less with longer rods, subject to the "diminishing returns" described above.
2) While longer rods increase dwell at TDC, they decrease the time a BDC, which can hurt the breathing of the engine (less time to fill cylinder).
Shorter rods have more rapid piston acceleration, which is bad at high rpm, but at low rpm, helps the engine "come up on the cam" better.
A shorter rod engine also needs better breathing to function right, even with identical displacement. That's one reason that restrictor plate NASCAR motors use VERY high rod ratios (1. 9 sometimes)-- it makes the most of restrictive breathing.
There's a lot more to be read on this topic, so I will post a link
here\
Jeff's site has all kinds of great info. It's worth spending the time to read his writeups. I learned a lot from him.
HOHN