
I had the top end of the engine block of my ’68 Camaro completely stripped down. The block still had the crank, connecting rods and pistons, but a loosely-attached oil pan and the scattershield were about the only other things bolted to the short block. It was time to start the re-assembly. But first there were measurements to be taken. It turns out the block had some replacement pistons, and that these were 0.045” from the deck height at top dead center rather than the usual 0.025”. Using a Fel-Pro 1003 head gasket with a compressed height of 0.041” would yield an abysmal 9.4:1 compression ratio with my 64 cc combustion chambers in the AFR heads and the stock 350 stroke of 3.48” with the thirty thousandths overbore 4.030” pistons. Craig at Ted’s Machine Shop hooked me up with some Fel-Pro steel shim gaskets (PN 1094) that had a compressed height of only 0.015”, lifting the compression ratio to a more respectable 10:1. I had been using the CamQuest software to determine which camshaft to select and how much power I was likely to make. At 9.5:1 CR, torque was estimated at 435 lb/ft at 4000 RPM, and HP 393 at 5000 RPM while at 10.0:1 CR, torque was 442 lb/ft at 4000 RPM and HP was 401at 5500 RPM. More importantly, average horsepower went from 99 HP to 117 HP.
I put some oil on the new hydraulic roller cam and put it in the block, aligned the true roller timing gear set (Comp Cams PN 3100) straight up, and put the heads on the block without gaskets but with some play-dough on the tops of the pistons. I then put the pushrods in the block and adjusted the rockers (Comp Cams PN 1305-16) for zero lash plus one quarter turn (as the Comp literatures suggests). After turning the engine over two full revolutions, I removed the heads and checked the thickness of the play-dough to ensure the valves had enough clearance from the pistons with the new cam. Then I cleaned all of the gasket surfaces and the head bolt holes, after which I placed the ARP head studs in the block with some PTFE sealant on the threads. Then I placed the Fel-Pro 1094 gaskets on the block and threw the AFR heads on the studs. After that it was a simple but tedious matter of torquing down the nuts on the head studs according to ARP instructions in three passes. For a timing chain cover, I used a Cloyes Quick Button two piece timing cover (PN 9-221) with an integrated roller bearing to control camshaft end-play. After installing the cover I checked end-play on the cam and the installation of the cam was complete—time to move on to the intake and EFI installation.



