Quote:
Originally Posted by Alan Roehrich
Most people seem to find that the bushed lifters do not make as much power. Not sure why.
Use a premium quality lifter, the biggest body and the biggest wheel that will fit the engine and the rules, with pressurized oiling. Have them rebuilt no less than once a year.
Do not use restrictors. Possibly the biggest contributor to lifter failure is loss of control in the valvetrain, which isn't always readily apparent. You may not see any other symptoms, but if you're hurting good lifters that have adequate oil (quality AND quantity) and proper maintenance, then odds are good that you have a control problem. Too little spring will hurt lifters far faster than too much.
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If you can go to a .904 or .937 lifter those have a bigger body, bigger axle, bigger wheel, And those are pressure fed, The bigger wheel means less revolutions around the lobe and slower speed.
I have seen about every lifter out there and I will say be-careful most companies like Crower, Comp, Isky lifter are to small for some reason. OEM Lifters measure right at .842 to .8422 The ones mentioned I have found to measure to small for an OEM lifter bore some are at .8405 to .8415 In blocks with short lifter bores those fit to loose. Morel lifters seem to be right at OEM spec whether its an .842, .875, .904
A lot of old blocks I find have a lot of lifter bore wear which needs to be addressed before installing roller lifters.