4spdragtop
Well-Known Member
Where does pushrod oiling come from? Only in banana groove shafts?
No it's not. The oiling holes are what's important.
No it's not. The oiling holes are what's important.
Where does pushrod oiling come from? Only in banana groove shafts?
.Where does pushrod oiling come from? Only in banana groove shafts?
Here is what you can do.
Once you have the valves in the heads.
Take and assemble the rocker arms on the shafts on the head with the spacers if it uses them, with the adjusting screws out.
Tighten the bolts that hold the shaft.
Push the rocker arm against the spring.
Now stick a nail or scribe thru the small machine hole on the back side of the rocker where the adjuster goes and mark the rocker arm shaft.
Mark all 16 then use a drill press and drill a 1/8 in or smaller oiling hole.
Take the end plugs out of the shafts so you can clean them real good.
Now the second part.
But the shafts on the head upside down without any rockers on them.
It's now time to banana grove them.
A triangle file can do this.
The groove is not very big. You don't want a big grove or you will have oil leaking out from under your rocker arms.
A pair of rocker groves are opposite each other. \ / or /\
From the same hole.
.The greatest load on those rocker arms is on the bottom where you need the banana grooves. Every bit of the spring pressure that is holding against that valve is pushing against the bottom of that rocker arm shaft.
exactly. The greatest pressure is concentrated on bottom of shaft, just slightly outboard of the attaching holes in the shaft. I can tell you from painful experience that is where they'll gall up from improper lubrication. The dealership mechanic re-installed mine incorrectly and not only ruined the rockers & shafts, but oil pump, bearings, crank, cam & lifters. Get it right or pay the consequences.The greatest load on those rocker arms is on the bottom where you need the banana grooves. Every bit of the spring pressure that is holding against that valve is pushing against the bottom of that rocker arm shaft.

IMHO......You need 2 sets of holes when running adjustables with hydraulic lifters. One hole keeps the pushrod cup oiled and the unloaded part of the shaft, and the other with the banana groove keeps the loaded side of the shaft oiled. I ditched my single hole shafts when I saw evidence of heavy wear exactly where the second hole and the banana groove should be.

Sorry IDK it's just something I saved for rocker position reference.Thanks, is that hyd or solid?
Thanks, is that hyd or solid?
in principle, it still applies for solids, too.FWIW, The rockers in the picture are hydraulics.
.Thanks, is that hyd or solid?
.
That is a picture of hydraulic rockers. They use 1 oiling hole.
How high do you plan to spin your motor?
Reading all of this has got me confused about my current configuration. The way I just pulled my rocker shafts and adjustable rockers was the drivers side of the engine has the notch cut out at the firewall and the oiling holes at about the 5:00 position pointing at the exhaust side of the head and banana groves at the bottom of the shaft. The passenger side has the notch towards the front and the oiling holes at about the 7:00 position with the banana groves at the bottom and the oiling holes pointing at the exhaust side of the head. If I turn the shafts around or swap the sides the geometry will never be correct if the notches are supposed to be the opposite way. These shafts and adj rockers were installed on my 70 340 way before it was mine.
Reading all of this has got me confused about my current configuration. The way I just pulled my rocker shafts and adjustable rockers was the drivers side of the engine has the notch cut out at the firewall and the oiling holes at about the 5:00 position pointing at the exhaust side of the head and banana groves at the bottom of the shaft. The passenger side has the notch towards the front and the oiling holes at about the 7:00 position with the banana groves at the bottom and the oiling holes pointing at the exhaust side of the head. If I turn the shafts around or swap the sides the geometry will never be correct if the notches are supposed to be the opposite way. These shafts and adj rockers were installed on my 70 340 way before it was mine.
.If they have notches, the notch is down and to the rear on the passenger's side and down and to the front on the driver's side. What will they look like if you do that?
.
All the "notched" one I've seen this is true, down and to the left.
I can't say the same about the shafts with the half round or ground on looking cut outs.
And yes some 273s only had 1 set of holes on the bottom of the adjustable rocker shafts.
The bottom hole is on the valve spring side of the pedestal when mounted.
If I line up the notches as you explained the oiling holes which i only have one row would be pointing to the pushrod side and not the valve spring side. Aren't the oiling holes supposed to be pointing to the 5 oclock position on drivers side and 6 oclock in passenger side?If they have notches, the notch is down and to the rear on the passenger's side and down and to the front on the driver's side. What will they look like if you do that?
If I line up the notches as you explained the oiling holes which i only have one row would be pointing to the pushrod side and not the valve spring side. Aren't the oiling holes supposed to be pointing to the 5 oclock position on drivers side and 6 oclock in passenger side?