watch AJPE do it on every engine...
Not an expert but this is bugging me so I need to chime in. I also have a Scat forged and I thought they had a radius on the journal instead of a fillet to make them stronger (so you need special bearings to match). Could this be contributing to this problem. Again if I am way off base please excuse my ignorance.
Just what I need to do. Build engines based on a TV show.
I tried it both ways. First with hitting the crank, and pry on it. 2nt with the cap its self. cap didn't move either way. The studs seam to fit the cap better then bolts. a standard bolt is .445" in diamitor and then at the vary top, next to the head, it grows to .496" my new studs are .496 all the way through.
Yeah, ok. But I do it my way. ;)
Take the crank out and fit the thrust bearing in it, check clearance with feeler gauge.
Studs need clearance to the caps- they cannot fit tight or they will bind up the cap and **** the thrust. You also need to line hone the mains when converting to studs as it loads the caps and block differently. Do not be wailing away on anything with a BFH please!
i dont think your putting two and two together. AJPE is run by Allen Johnson, Mopar Pro stock champ.
http://www.allenjohnson.com/
You may want to see if those two studs are bent... If they are cocking the thrust they will try to **** the next cap you use them on and at minimum affect the oil clearance. I've seen them get bent at a shop when the block was lifted using a strap and overhead hoist into a peice of equipment. The #1 cap was not torqued and the leverage was enough to bend the studs. It was noted when they did torque the cap and it wouldn't line up. In any case - as was noted by CP - the studs need to be fit to the caps - somethings they holes need enlarging - then the caps torqued a couple times, then it should be line bored and honed.
It almost sounds like the cap was on backwards whn they line honed it. What happens if you disregard the placement of the bearing tangs and put the cap on backwards?