So let me get this straight,,,you think that a piston going to the top of the cylinder with an open exhaust valve every other engine rotation, which will allow the air/gasses in the cylinder to escape out the exhaust system, will provide the same resistance as having both valves closed (because DFM collapsed the lifters) so that every time the piston goes to the top of the cylinder it must compress those gases? Do I have that right?
In a V8, in any given rotation of the crankshaft, with the lifters locked, there would be four cylinders doing a compression stroke and four cylinders on an exhaust stroke when the piston came to the top of the cylinder, so only four of the cylinders would be causing resistance to rotation, or braking force, for every crankshaft rotation. Now unlock the lifters, and all eight cylinders would be compressing air/ gases causes resistance to rotation, or braking force, every time they came to the top of the cylinder.
The whole restricting the exhaust thing is the same principle (different method, but same principle) used the ever popular "Jake Brake" on diesels, seems to help slow them down.
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