Bill Childs (2/26/2015)
My old copy of The Ford Y-Block book from the mid 1980's by James Eickman describes and shows drilling, chamfering, and grinding grooves at the base of the lifter bore bosses in the valley to increase oil to cam and lifters. The newer book, Ford Y-Block Engines by Charles Morris, doesn't include this. Is it safe to assume that we're getting plenty oil to these areas with a fresh rebuild, modern oil, and proper maintenance?
Not new to mid-fifties Fords and Y-Blocks, just pulling parts and resources together to restore a '56 big window effie that's been back and forth between dad and I for 40+ years. I have a '55-'56 292 from a car and '57-'58 EZC-G heads currently being cleaned and checked for damage.
Welcome to the Forum, Bill.
It's been reported that the drilling and grooving around the lifter bores is not needed or necessary although proposed in Eickman's 1984 book. I think Ted Eaton or Tim McMaster. reported this in an earlier Forum thread based upon an engine build they tested.
Keep those 'extra' parts from your '55-'56 vintage 292 block. Some of us like the oil trough for the timing chain, the counterweight for the front of the camshaft, and the oil baffle trays from under the rocker arm shafts, all of which FoMoCo eliminated in later production years.
As you may know there are three species of the ECZ-G cylinder heads. See this Internet page
http://yblockguy.com/techtips/postedheads.html for an explanation of this. The point of this information is that for un-posted heads, maximum milling is .025 For the posted heads, maximum milling is .045. The pads on the y-block cylinder heads below the exhaust ports and adjacent to the spark plug holes... their original thickness when manufactured by FoMoCo was 1.000 inch -Measure their present thickness to see if the heads have already been cut at all.
In addition to Charles Morris' informative y-block book consider looking at the following ...
Ted Eaton's numerous y-block Ford related articles at
http://www.eatonbalancing.com/blog/2014/06/25/quick-index-for-eaton-balancing-articles/John Mummert's web site of y-block information, parts, and components at
http://www.ford-y-block.com/and Tim McMaster's web site information and You Tube Video offerings at
http://yblockguy.com/ Hope some of this helps as you get going.
NoShortcuts
a.k.a. Charlie Brown
near Syracuse, New York