Dick,, Oopppss, you are soooo right... Now,, about that rocker.. Is it a nice redwood? And how hard is it going to be to plop me back in it.. :) How about we measure cam lift, times 1.5<advertised rocker ratio>. The actual rocker ratio is 1.43/1.47 if anyone actually cares... Seeing as I have been up since 6AM Monday, I am going to bed... You people can camshafts at me and I won't know it, or even care... :) Robb At 08:34 AM 1/29/02 -0800, you wrote: >Regarding measuring lift: If you measure it at the valve stem (which I >agree is the easy way) you are relying on the valve lifter to not leak down >while the spring pressure is pushing it. Of course this caution is germane >only to those engines with hydraulic valve lifters, but all Imperials after >1950 have those. > >If it is not an enormous amount of extra trouble, you can use a dial >indicator directly on the cam lobe or on the body of the lifter, whichever >item you can set up your indicator to ride on, then for valve lift you need >to know the rocker shaft multiplying factor. If you have a loose rocker >handy, you can measure this, or it is given in some engine spec books. If >you are careful, you can perhaps measure this right "off your rocker", which >we all are anyway! > >Dick Benjamin >----- Original Message ----- >From: <mopar@xxxxxxxxxxxx> >> Good morning, D2, >> There is more to a cam than lift spec > We can determine VALVE lift with dial indicator on tip of >> a valve and rotate motor to cycle cam rotation > > So,, Dim,, go remove your valve covers and get crackin' >> :) >> Robb > > > >