Gentleman, hope all is well. I got home 2 days ago after being gone for a month and the hurricane didnt destroy my truck or blow all the front end parts out of my bed. Cant say the same for the neighborhood or my fridge but I got very lucky. I finally got my certification from the FAA to fix any airplane that flies within the USA so thats neat.
Anyways I got to working on the engine yesterday I got two adjustable push rod "length checkers" (comp cams brand from summit i believe 9.5 to 10.5 inches)but I just used them as adjustable pushrods to check the valves clearances with solid lifters and zero lash with a typ4 cam.
With 7 thou off of each head, no grind on the seats, and comp valve springs shimmed to 1.8" the clearances came in at ~55 thou.
The comp cams instructions are easy to follow. But heres what I did.
1) Put 2 small balls of playdough on top of the pistons where they will get mashed by the valves when they unseat. Make sure the playdough wont stick to the pistons by lightly oiling the piston top and the valve faces with your preferred engine oil.
2) Using a sacrafice head gasket that has been torqued at least 1x, install the head using a handful of head bolts to keep it down tight in the front and back.
NOTE If you havent torqued the gasket yet or dont want to you can get the difference between torqued and untorqued thickness by contacting the gasket manufacturer and subtract the difference from your clearance measurement(youll get that later)
3) Rotate crank while watching the solid lifters to see when they are lowest and not moving for a single cylinder(valves both seated)
4) Once the lifters are both at their lowest points put the pushrods on top of themand install/ torque the rocker arm assembly with the adjustable pushrods long enough to not seat against the rocker arms.
5) Once the arms are torqued unscrew the adjustable pushrods until they just make contact with the rocker arms then lock them into place by hand srewing the lock nut to the bottom put a wrench on it, then put a wrench on the top one and unscrew it 1/6 to 1/3 of a turn until it is snug and you cant freely spin the push rod or move it at all.
NOTE: To er on the safe side the more sug the push rod is the better because you will be slightly lifting the valve from the seat giving you a slightly smaller clearance, if this smaller clearance is within limits then you are good to go and its better than having a re larger clearance and hoping for the best.
6) once both push rods are adjusted to zero valve lash rotate the crank clockwise 2x so the valves will seat and unseat a full cycle
7) Repeat steps 3 through 6 for each cylinder
8) Try to go to your happy place. Prepare for an unlikely trip to the machine shop, prepare to tell your wife that even though you promised you wouldnt spend anymore you just have 1 more trip to the machine shop and thats it.
9) Remove the head. Look at your squished playdough. Its pretty anticlimactic isnt it.
10) Recommended clearance is 30 thou but you can get away with 15 thou. You can just compare the squished playdough to a feeler gauge bit if it looks close let the playdough dry out and measure with calipers.
I makde a video on how to make solid lfters. I can make a single post for the stickys on checking valve clearance
Any tips for break in procedure besides filter and oil change at 500 miles? I should have this thing in this weekend but beteeen putting the front end back together and messing with my downpipe, bleeding the power steering, timing the IP i dont know if she will be rolling down the road till next weekend.
Lastly my arp studs worked great, except for one. There seems to be a machining error in the block which causes the stud to shoulder about 3/16 to 1/4 inch higher than the other ones. It doesnt affect the head bolts though. Instead of using my brain and adding an additional washer, my excitement got the best of me I tried to modify the stud and needless to say I contacted ARP and were going to sort something out on Monday. I just torqued the 1 head down with a head bolt for now. Ill replace it with a stud when I get the new one in.
Stupid mistakes. Count on them happening.
I look forward to sharing and hearing from you guys.