HOT ROD used to be a good magazine, like when they taught us how to put 'juice brakes' on our '32, and the b/w photos clearly showed dirty hands that clearly belonged to the writer.
Now, it's just stuff like "We took a new car down to Joe Expensive's Go-Fast Shop, and he bolted on some stuff that he claimed would make the car go faster. We sorta wish we had actually tested it, but that would be, like, work."
IOW, what you read is secondhand or thirdhand, probably misquoted, and the original source may have been making up stuff anyway.
I know that if I designed engines, and had a set of internal rules of thumb for proportioning them, I wouldn't reveal those rules to just anyone.
I'd like to think that today's engine designers don't need rules of thumb because they have a lot of zoomy tools, but I've analyzed enough structures (not engines) to recognize that _all_ the parts of an engine are flexible, the internal loads are pretty large, and the dynamics of their interactions should be really, er, interesting, probably too much so for the zoomy tools to handle without simplifications in the math models, i.e., rules of thumb. ... which are too commercially valuable to reveal to a magazine writer.
Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA