Stinkin autocorrect!Break in or breaking? Rollers can still go out and trash engines.
Fixed
Stinkin autocorrect!Break in or breaking? Rollers can still go out and trash engines.
Break in or breaking? Rollers can still go out and trash engines.
What about drilling and tapping the block to accept a spider plate from a later model roller cam block to hold the lifters in place?
Jeff
What about drilling and tapping the block to accept a spider plate from a later model roller cam block to hold the lifters in place?
Jeff
The lifter bores are taller on the roller blocks as well.There’s some high performing stock type lifters for around $13 each. The later model block has bosses cast into the valley to accept 3/8-1/3 inch of thread. It may be possible to get the valley spot faced and then have some weld nuts attached with some powder flow welding. I think a better option may be riv-nuts, but the iron is pretty thin in that part of the valley. AFAIK, putting bosses for the cam retainer plate in a conventional block is mostly uncharted territory. I’ll have to look later today in my stash to see what might be possible. I think drill through the top after marking with a retainer plate and drilling, spot face the bottom. Run a bolt through from the cam tunnel and put a Belleville washer and nut on top. Pre-heat and Ni-Rod or gas weld the Belleville washer in place. The Washers would have to be spot faced to equal height. To install the rib nuts, you’d have to use a piece of high strength all thread inside of a piece of DOM carbon tube because the rib-nut tool won’t fit in the bottom. Also, the top of the lifter bosses are all going to have to be milled to the same height for the dog bone retainers. While possible, once you look at getting all this done by someone who knows what they’re doing with a knee mill big enough to clamp an engine block into and fo this it may not exactly be what one would call “practical”...
There’s some high performing stock type lifters for around $13 each. The later model block has bosses cast into the valley to accept 3/8-1/3 inch of thread. It may be possible to get the valley spot faced and then have some weld nuts attached with some powder flow welding. I think a better option may be riv-nuts, but the iron is pretty thin in that part of the valley. AFAIK, putting bosses for the cam retainer plate in a conventional block is mostly uncharted territory. I’ll have to look later today in my stash to see what might be possible. I think drill through the top after marking with a retainer plate and drilling, spot face the cam tunnel side. Run a bolt through from the cam tunnel and put a Belleville washer and nut on top. Pre-heat and Ni-Rod or gas weld the Belleville washer in place. The washers would have to be spot faced to equal height. To install the rib nuts, you’d have to use a piece of high strength all thread inside of a piece of DOM carbon tube because the rib-nut tool won’t fit in the bottom. Also, the top of the lifter bosses are all going to have to be milled to the same height for the dog bone retainers. While possible, once you look at getting all this done by someone who knows what they’re doing with a knee mill big enough to clamp an engine block into and fo this it may not exactly be what one would call “practical”...
The lifter bores are taller on the roller blocks as well.
I’m all for easier, do you care to elaborate? Are you referring to the lifter guide retainer plate (spider) as “the lifter valley windage tray”? I think the taller cam bosses on the roller blocks may be the bigger pitfall to overcome here. It may require the spacing for the lifter guides in order for everything to match up for the retainer plate to hold the guide bars in place.Instead of drilling all those holes and worrying about all that stuff how about if you just use the straps like the lifter Valley windage tray uses to hold it down.
I’m all for easier, do you care to elaborate? Are you referring to the lifter guide retainer plate (spider) as “the lifter valley windage tray”? I think the taller cam bosses on the roller blocks may be the bigger pitfall to overcome here. It may require the spacing for the lifter guides in order for everything to match up for the retainer plate to hold the guide bars in place.
.525 seems to be the limit or so everyone says.How much lift at the lobe will the stock Magnum system live with either with the stock lifters or those upgraded Crane stock style?
I’m all for easier, do you care to elaborate? Are you referring to the lifter guide retainer plate (spider) as “the lifter valley windage tray”? I think the taller cam bosses on the roller blocks may be the bigger pitfall to overcome here. It may require the spacing for the lifter guides in order for everything to match up for the retainer plate to hold the guide bars in place.
That's for oiling not to hold the lifters in.View attachment 1715611435
I'm taking about using this hold down idea to hold the spider in place.
By the way it might not be a bad idea to Bush the lifter bores.
That's for oiling not to hold the lifters in.
Still talking about a LA block I bet. The stock lifters that need the spider won't work in the LA blocks from what i understand. They stick out out of the lifter bores too far and blow oil out all over. The retro lifters don't. Try them if you like.Hey pay attention to what I said.
I said to apply the idea behind holding this tray down.
Still talking about a LA block I bet. The stock lifters that need the spider won't work in the LA blocks from what i understand. They stick out out of the lifter bores too far and blow oil out all over. The retro lifters don't. Try them if you like.
View attachment 1715611435
I'm taking about using this hold down idea to hold the spider in place.
By the way it might not be a bad idea to Bush the lifter bores.