OP








Yes, yes it is....Thats some serious motor ****...
The cylinder heads are Promaxx project X series. 185cc runner (which is mostly meaningless) with very impressive flow rates under .500 lift. Modern heart-ish quench chamber, probably needs 4* less timing than open chamber. Good valves, springs and hardware.Purty!!
What heads did you end up buying?
It is ugly as sin, but I came to really like the E-Core OEM coil that I used on the Ranchero.









Taking my time on the details, little bit better each round.
At times I think perfection has almost killed the hot rodding mentality.
Justin, Mike and Scott, I was into cars about the time I learned to walk. As a teenager all I wanted to do was modify automobiles. When my life changed a bit at 20 I still wanted to work on cars but I had no friends or mentors to help me. When I was fortunate enough to retire at 50 I had the time (and the car) to get serious about working on cars.I'm doing my best to hold down the other end of the spectrum...![]()






I would assume the one piece should work OK with fixed spacing, but perhaps not and hence the 2 piece design to dial in better.I've heard of, but never done so, engine assemblers getting the guides perfectly aligned and then adding a couple tack welds to the guide pieces so that they can't rotate like that. I'm assuming that the guides in question had precision holes for the rocker studs or they would still be able to move a little.

Not really. Roller lifters are $1000, just lifters. This cam/lifter setup is kinda temporary for this phase of the engine build. I may consider a roller for the next phase, which will need a different block, so I'll look for a 92-96 roller block.Would adding roller tappets have been a worthwhile option?
I keep wondering what to do with my 302 in my Bronco when the time comes, besides ship it to your place to rework.
Exactly. Spot on...It's trying new stuff and happily failing along the way. It really is the journey, not the destination.














Yes, catch can would be a good idea!Justin, I suggest you toss a catchcan on that. She's looking great bud, I can't wait to hear how it turns out.







For non-tapered threads like inverted flare an o-ring can be used, but the o-ring squish prevents being able to torque and stay put. Removing the hose end can loosen the o-ring side, so you have to use two wrenches. I use some blue or red locktite on the threads, and maybe a o-ring, some fittings come with them.
For tapered fittings I use permatex thread sealer (anaerobic type) and no Teflon tape. I used to use both, but the tape is a pain to remove and gets stuck in the female threads. Rouge tape can clog small orifices like a nitrous solenoid or a lifter.

