A am new to the oiling of a hydraulic lifter small six - I am familier with the oiling of the solid lifter engines that have been in my Falcon.
Yesterday I ran the '78 200 engine with a cut open valve cover and noticed that the oiling of the push rods is much better than the oil dribbling out of the oiling hole and onto the valve stem tip. My previous solid lifter engines oiled the valve stem tips much better. At 1500 to 2000 RPM, there was only minor oil splashing (and most of that was off of the push rods, not off of the valve keepers/springs. I mounted a valve cover with the top surface cut off to minimize the expected mess of oil spray.
After running the engine at a fast idle, for about 10 minutes, some of the ends of the valves only had a few drops of oil on them (most of the oil flow that was dribbling out of the rocker oiling hole was dropping off of the side of the rocker before reaching the valve stem tip). I removed the rocker shaft and the passage ways (groove in the rocker bores, rocker shaft bore and rocker pedstal) were free of oil sludge. I have been running a can of Seafoam in the oil for the past 1500 miles - I had what appeared to sound like a collapsed / sticky lifter.
Should I be concerned about this minimal oiling of the valve stem tips? The 250K mile rockers that were used on my push rod engine(s) shows about the same ammount of wear as these 50K mile rockers. I expect to see more oiling on the valve stems and a bit less on the push rod ends. I am considering grinding a *very* shallow groove (about 0.010 deep) from the groove in the rocker bore to the oiling hole on the rocker.
Your thoughts?
Yesterday I ran the '78 200 engine with a cut open valve cover and noticed that the oiling of the push rods is much better than the oil dribbling out of the oiling hole and onto the valve stem tip. My previous solid lifter engines oiled the valve stem tips much better. At 1500 to 2000 RPM, there was only minor oil splashing (and most of that was off of the push rods, not off of the valve keepers/springs. I mounted a valve cover with the top surface cut off to minimize the expected mess of oil spray.
After running the engine at a fast idle, for about 10 minutes, some of the ends of the valves only had a few drops of oil on them (most of the oil flow that was dribbling out of the rocker oiling hole was dropping off of the side of the rocker before reaching the valve stem tip). I removed the rocker shaft and the passage ways (groove in the rocker bores, rocker shaft bore and rocker pedstal) were free of oil sludge. I have been running a can of Seafoam in the oil for the past 1500 miles - I had what appeared to sound like a collapsed / sticky lifter.
Should I be concerned about this minimal oiling of the valve stem tips? The 250K mile rockers that were used on my push rod engine(s) shows about the same ammount of wear as these 50K mile rockers. I expect to see more oiling on the valve stems and a bit less on the push rod ends. I am considering grinding a *very* shallow groove (about 0.010 deep) from the groove in the rocker bore to the oiling hole on the rocker.
Your thoughts?