dave-r wrote:One thing you could check before you drive it again.
If you have adjustable rockers re-set the lifter pre-load or lash and check that all the lock nuts on the adjusters are good and tight. Sometimes high revs shakes them loose.
How do I know?
That is what happened to me and on the very next run I dropped two pushrods.
On the paranoid side, you should remove the rocker arms shaft and check the spring height on all valves.
They should be equal (or pretty close). There might be a very slight difference between intake and exhaust valves though (depending on the lock type).
If you have the tool required to remove the locks and springs with heads installed, you can remove them on one valve and check out the valve locks. If it's OK and the heights are all equal, you deserve a beer.
If not, you need a Summit Racing catalog!
You may also be able to check installed spring height from a shop manual
If one valve has started to go through the valve lock, you'll only find out too late, when it punches completely through, and meets the piston - that happened to me 3 weeks ago. I did a run with a 4 speed trans and Indy heads, missed the gear change to 3rd (and went to 1st). Two intake valves started to punch through the locks, and one went all the way through.
If all is well, it's a 2 hour job to check everything's alright. If all is not, better find out while the valves are all up there... I did not, and I need to replace one valve, one guide, and a complete set of valve locks (and of course, I had to remove the heads).
Of course, you should take the opportunity to check that no pushrod is bent, but that only takes another 20 seconds per pushrod and a flat surface to make them roll.
On my car, it should have been visible, the valve retainer had started to rub on the rocker arm from below and was quite bright (all others are phosphate-black). With 5 people looking at it by the side of the road, no one saw a damn thing.
Measuring spring height is the surest way to go. And the surest way to avoid that :
http://fb440.free.fr/indy/demontage.htm
Dave is right, a two-stage rev limiter is really sweet if you do burnouts on a regular basis, and nothing is more expensive and time-consuming than unplanned engine work...
Besides, unplanned engine work can keep you away from the Mopar EuroNats, and that sucks
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