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#1
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.875 Solid roller lifter for stock block 455
Hey everybody and happy holidays,
I am looking for a set of .875 Solid roller lifters for a stock block 455 And I realize there much like hens teeth or unicorns to find – LOL. Thank you and take care, Craig |
#2
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Hi there and happy holidays to you. I take it that you had your lifter bores machined to accept .875 dia lifters ? Isn't that a Ford size ? Who and how did they do the machining ? I've heard that BAM would make oversize diameters but not sure. I am interested in this because I have a block that has worn lifter bores. Thanks.
John |
#3
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We ran .875, .903. .927 from Crower. You would need to call them and talk to then directly to really get an ETA on exactly what you need. Pin pressure oiling, needle or bushings, push rod seat offsets. I would start there.
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#4
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Ford lifters bands are too low to work - the SBF lifters I had opened the oil band on base circle - zero oil pressure.
Isky had some custom leftover lifters for SBC at .875 just barely worked - still leaked oil pressure. |
#5
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Yes, I was just refering to the diameter, wasn't sure what all brands were that size. I would call BAM or sombody else as mentioned to get the Pontiac length in that diameter and options.
So was the cost to enlarge the lifter bores a resonable cost ? If you don't want to say thats ok. I know sometimes special tooling is required. Thanks . John |
#6
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Offset pushrod seat or standard?
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#7
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Standard
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#8
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I only did that because the machine shop that I was working with had done all the machine work for the short block and then told me the lifter bores were too big. Given my money and resources I had to look to going to a larger lifter bore. It was an expensive nightmare and required the machinist insisting upon having a actual blueprint and their saying that they might not be a double to do it because of casting to thin or because it could catch an edge and crack the cast-iron. Right now my needing rebuilt or replaced Isky lifters built for a small block Chevy just barely are adequate for oil control given the lower oil band location for Chevy lifters.
So if you're connected with a good machinist, have the special tooling and their willing to work with you Then it could be okay. |
#9
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Thanks for the answer Craig, same boat I'm in. Best of luck to you. Sorry to sidetrack your thread.
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#10
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BB70 - glad you asked and will let you know how the search goes with all the companies contacted.
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The Following User Says Thank You to CraigG. For This Useful Post: | ||
#11
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I had my lifter bores bushed with bronze bushings.Never had a issue with that block.FWIW
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#12
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Tom S,
I would be very interested in your experience - Please tell as much as you can. Thanks, Craig |
#13
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This was the block
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#14
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This was a block I found and decided to build it.The shop thought we should bush the lifters.This block was a discarded block.When the bores were machined some of the bores blew out.The shop found granite tubes correct diameter and was able to weld them back up.After,the remachined and the bronze bushings were installed.After fixing other casting issues the block was built and still lives a good RA V life.They make fixture that fits the valley to locate the bores properly.Tom
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#15
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Thank you Tom. That is interesting and looks like an aluminum block?
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#16
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Yes,i have owned a few of them,built 2.Tom
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#17
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Quote:
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#18
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Mike,the guy that saved this block was amazing.He had to pin a few leaks,the big deal was the place on the drivers side of the valley that takes oil down to the dizzy was a void.Gene made a stainless tube and found a way to press it in and then make a flair fitting to flair it inside and outside.He then put the block in a tank of 180 degree water and ran block sealer through the whole block.He also did the alu block that was part of a complete alu engine at M/Ts.It was stamped 8v370 but had 3in mains.It was designed to run bare alu like the Vegas.Gene sleeved it and I think we wound up like 366 CI.He sealed that block also.His name was Gene Ohole(spelling)He past away a couple years go.Tom
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#19
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You had an extraordinary, rare aluminum Pontiac block and a guy with skills to match working on it. Guys like that are dying off fast and there will no one to replace them. That sealer I bet was a ceramic slurry run through the block under some pressure. I had a few blocks and several leaky Edelbrock heads fixed that way. Cost becomes no object when trying to save a piece of history. I put 8 sleeves in and had 3-4 major water cracks repaired on a numbers matching lightweight hemi car. Same deal, save the engine, cost no object.
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#20
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If your gonna bore the lifters and sleeve them,wouldn't it be a good idea to install the mega brace? or either way install lifter bore brace? if you can find it. I'm just curious.
https://butlerperformance.com/c-1234...ega-brace.html
__________________
68 Firebird. IA2 block, 505 cu in, E-head, Solid roller 3650 weight. Reid TH400 4:11 gear. 29" slick. Best so far 10.12@133 mph. 1.43 60 ft. 76 Trans am, TKX .81 o/d, 3.73 Moser rearend, 468 with KRE D-ports, Doug headers, 3" Exh. |
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