Mad Dart
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How about using a Grade 8 Washer to raise them up?
Just throwing out ideas......
Just throwing out ideas......
Brian, here's a picture of the roller resting on the valve tip (closed position)...just in case what I was saying didnt convey the idea. hehe
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Too far toward the intake side, correct?
I'll get the sweep pattern later. I have a meeting this morning and I'll do some more tinkering soon as I have time.
Yep that's too far off IMO. Those valves I use are .096 taller than oem so I wouldn't think that would be enough to do that. The valves are sitting exactly in the same spot as the LA heads we do, and the Hughes LA rockers fit perfectly and the sweep is down in the .040 range.
If they were typical stud and guide plate rockers you just lengthen the pushrod to get what you want. But those you'll have to raise up some. I think using the cut guide plate method you talked about might be the best way to go. You want as much support under that pedestal as you can get.
Brian
How about using a Grade 8 Washer to raise them up?
Just throwing out ideas......
That looks better.
At least the issue is on the side of your valve stem that is easier to correct.
Nice work getting it in shape
On the Hughes Stainless rockers, are they just using 1.6 ratio Chevy Comp rockers?
I run Hughes rockers on my 416 with Eddie heads. I had to shim the shafts up .120 to get the roller tip closer to the center of the stem in the closed valve position. I had the same issue before I did that as you did with the roller being way back on the valve towards the intake side. I called Dave Hughes and and emailed him some pics of the sweep pattern and he right away said I wasn't getting full lift because of the wrong valve geometry. He said that it is common on LA motors to have to raise up the rocker shafts to correct this problem. I used his aluminum rocker shim kit to do the job and so far it's worked out okay. He said that aluminum shims can be formed easier to the shaft when torqued down and will seal the oil hole better than the steel ones do so that's why they use the aluminum ones over the steel shims. Plus his kit shows you how to trim the shims to get the best fit if you need to use multiple shims instead of just one to get the height you need.
On the Hughes Stainless rockers, are they just using 1.6 ratio Chevy Comp rockers?
All of the aftermarket magnum roller rockers are a chevy design to be specific. Same exact thing. Nothing wrong with it. As far as who makes them for hughes who knows? Even if they are the comp stainless rockers, the comps are good stuff. I just wanted more than studs so this is what I am using and finding I have the same geometry tweaking issues as a lot of the LA crowd, only I have to go about it a different way than they do by using a flat shim under the pedestal instead of a concave spacer like the LA shafts.
The cool thing about this is that unlike a shaft or my pedestal shafts, with a stud and chevy rocker, the geometry is WAY easy to correct unlike LA and mag shaft rollers. You just adjust the height of the rocer on the stud until you get a good pattern.
I didn't mean to imply that there was a problem with doing it that way. I've got a set of the Comp rockers. I thought maybe I'd see if Hughes would sell me just the studs etc from their kit.
Steve
Ya gotta love huge's stuff,especially thier valvetrain goodies.
Any part numbers you want to send would be appreciated.
I've got the old Crane stud conversion kit sitting here, but I've heard the geometry is inferior to the hughes stuff.
I'm running the stock valvetrain on my Magnum right now, and its acceptable, but obviously not ideal.
On the Hughes Stainless rockers, are they just using 1.6 ratio Chevy Comp rockers?
I was mearly commenting on your valve geometry based on the pictures you provided and saying that I had the same issue even though I'm running LA heads and that yes, I had to raise that shaft to correct it by shimming under it! I was under the impression that you were wondering about the position of your roller tip on the valve and if it would work or not and if you needed to do some shimming to! At least I thought that's what you were asking in the first threads with the pictures. LA or Magnum matters not. What matters is the correct valve geometry. The rocker roller tip is supposed to be just slightly back of the center of the valve stem in the closed valve postion. It will roll out from there and then back during complete valve lift and seat.