junkyardhero
Well-Known Member
have a seat friend... my old lady eats catsup and tomatoes on a dog.Also, nobody, I mean nobody eats catsup on a hot dog.
i know, she's a monster-- i mean, obviously-- she's with me. but still.
have a seat friend... my old lady eats catsup and tomatoes on a dog.Also, nobody, I mean nobody eats catsup on a hot dog.
It's another movie quote dummy. lolhave a seat friend... my old lady eats catsup and tomatoes on a dog.
i know, she's a monster-- i mean, obviously-- she's with me. but still.
That I’m not sure of and I don’t know how DLC would wear on DLC coatings.Sounds like it would be a good investment for hydraulic flat tappet lifters. Isn't there a treatment that can be done to the cam as well?
i thought the line was: you shouldn't marry somebody that puts ketchup on a hot dog, you never know what other bad life choices they makeIt's another movie quote dummy. lol
i thought the line was: you shouldn't marry somebody that puts ketchup on a hot dog, you never know what other bad life choices they make
or something like that. i do know it's from sudden impact tho!
Send a batch of batch of used lifters out of a stock engine to Oregon Cam Grinders to get reground and hardened/rebuilt.Who makes the best quality small block hydraulic lifter that would survive camshaft break in?
But then what gets done to the guts?Send a batch of batch of used lifters out of a stock engine to Oregon Cam Grinders to get reground and hardened/rebuilt.
He's wrong about that. Melling makes lifters and most other engine parts here. This is from their web site. All of the lifters I just bought for a friend's 283 Chevy have "MADE IN USA" on the boxes, as well as the set I got for my Ford 400 a while back.I didn't read 36 posts. Mike Jones, aka Cam King & renowned cam grinder said a while back that the FT lifters are made off shore, only one company making them in the US. This week on Speed talk he said he has Chebby lifters.....for $320.
So if you are getting lifters for much less.....they are not going to be US made.
As has been said sooooooooooooooooooooooooo many times on forums like this: if you do NOT want lobe lifter/failure, have some factory lifters re-faced.
Fancy coatings on parts that aren’t to spec isn’t going to help. Much of the failures are due to incorrect profile on lifter faces and cam lobes so they end up not spinning. I’m sure there are some due to metallurgy but unless you’re running significant spring pressures, the exotic coatings and oiling methods are not warranted. Use parts that are made correctly to begin with and they’ll work this as well as they did back in the good old days.Sounds like it would be a good investment for hydraulic flat tappet lifters. Isn't there a treatment that can be done to the cam as well?
How was the Dart,@Dan the man ?Going Sunday to look at a dart.
Got canceled due to severe weather. Missouri and Illinois had heavy rain hail and high winds. There's over 20,000 people in Illinois without power. Not a good weekendHow was the Dart,@Dan the man ?