Just broke the new Lunati in and all is well. Here's a breakdown of what I did this time around to prevent lobe wipe:
Filled crankcase with SJ rated Rottela SAE 30 plus 1 pint of Hughes Engines additive.
Coated lobes with the supplied break-in paste that came with cam and lifter kit.
Coated lifter foot with the same paste.
Smeared lifter sides with Royal Purple Full Synthetic to promote lifter rotation.
Primed oil system prior to starting.
As i was adjusting the valves, I noticed the supplied break in paste was getting wiped off, so I said fk it and poured the rest of an old bottle of Comp Cams break in lube over the cam prior to installing the intake manifold.
Set timing statically to 12 BTDC. I always tighten the distributor on break-in just enough so it won't move on it's own, but I can still move it around if necessary.
Primed carb. Easy when you have an electric fuel pump.
Followed Lunati's break-in directions to a T. Fire up and run between 2000 to 2500 rpm for 20 minutes. After the 20 min. are up, raise the rpm in 500 rpm increments for 1 minute at time until 3500 rpm is reached. Then go back down 500 rpm at a time for a minute at a time until you hit 1000 rpm. According to Lunati, once you hit 1000 rpm the break in process is complete.
Here's a few following notes:
I used the "Right Stuff" as a front and rear manifold/china wall sealant and I have zero leaks. I also used it as a manifold coolant inlet sealant WITH NO GASKET, and have zero leaks. This stuff is is truly the right stuff and I'm damn impressed. They claim no cure time and I believe it. When using RTV Black in the same manner I would always leave 24 hours to cure. I've tried it sooner and it always leaked whether for a differential, coolant or oil pan.
Another note is that I used a Milodon Crush Proof oil pan gasket. Since this engine was still in my truck I needed to use RTV to stick the gasket to the block. If I used a cork gasket, the RTV would have acted as a lubricant and squished right out when torqueing. The Milodon gasket did as advertised and held torque without a problem.
In closing, I found out quite a few things that just might help all my Mopar Bretheren.

The "Right Stuff" is the right stuff, Milodon makes a kick *** gasket, Lunati makes a great cam, Hughes Engines additive appears to work and I will never buy a flat tappet cam again, LOL!
Oh yeah, at 195 degrees after 25 minutes of cam break-in at 2300 rpm I'm still running 69-70 psi of oil pressure.
My impressions of this cam are as follows:
Super smooth idle and zero valvetrain noise and am pulling 19"+ of vacuum. I will not be test cruising tonight as I am freakin' beat. 100+ degrees today and I was just about dying.
I am now gulping a big fat Bacardi and Cherry Coke in my one last remaining Snap-On girley mug from '87 and loving every minute of it. :cheers: No driving tonight.