Long story short. I took my 360 magnum rods and pistons and a scat cast 408 crank to my balancer. I Started to assemble my engine and like an idiot took all of the rod caps off and placed them in a pile on the bench and started putting the bearing halves in both the rods and caps. It wasn't until i had the pistons in the block that I realized the rod caps had been machined by my balancer and each one had been ground differently. I guess I was just used to assembling a stock engine and not worrying about switching up the caps.
So now im not sure what to do.
Do I take the rods/pistons and caps back to the balancer?
Do I run it and not worry about it?
Do I get a digital gram scale and weigh them?
I figured if did the weighing my self I would couple the heaviest rod/piston with the lightest cap, then the second heaviest rod/piston with the second lightest cap, and so on until the lightest rod/piston had the heaviest cap.
This is not above my ability but definatly outside of my normal area of operation.
My set up is a balanced scat cast 4 inch crank, magnum stock rods, mopar stroker pistons.
My intended use is in a non race vehicle that will never go past 6000 rpm.
I need help figuring this out.
So now im not sure what to do.
Do I take the rods/pistons and caps back to the balancer?
Do I run it and not worry about it?
Do I get a digital gram scale and weigh them?
I figured if did the weighing my self I would couple the heaviest rod/piston with the lightest cap, then the second heaviest rod/piston with the second lightest cap, and so on until the lightest rod/piston had the heaviest cap.
This is not above my ability but definatly outside of my normal area of operation.
My set up is a balanced scat cast 4 inch crank, magnum stock rods, mopar stroker pistons.
My intended use is in a non race vehicle that will never go past 6000 rpm.
I need help figuring this out.

















