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texasmark1
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Last Active: 6 Years Ago
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recently rebuilt 272; less than 20 hours of around-town, break in miles on it so far; consistent oil pressure of 60-70... am I ok? thanks, Mark
"God Bless Texas"location: Houston,TX
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Ol'ford nut
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OK! 60-70 sounds great. I would say most are happy with 45-50. I would get it out of town a little to break it in and change oil around 500 miles. Drop the oil into a clean container and look it over. Will tell you how everything is working inside.
Ol'ford nutCentral Iowa
56 Vic w/292 & 4 spd.
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oldcarmark
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Ford manual says 50-55 at 2500 RPM so Yeah I think you are good!

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DANIEL TINDER
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I installed 1/16" restrictors in my rocker stand in a vain attempt to boost pressure to worn-out mains. Fresh motor will have deeper cam groove, so I will likely have to adjust the orifice size eventually, and balance pressure between rockers & mains.
I read reports of those who cannot run engine with rocker covers removed without an oil mess. Never had that problem, though oil pours out the drain tubes prodigiously. I'm just wondering how much rocker flow is really adequate? If I end up with a very high gauge pressure reading with restrictors removed, should I leave them out to maximize rocker cooling/lubrication? SHOULD a properly balanced system fling oil with the covers off, I wonder?
6 VOLTS/POS. GRD. NW INDIANA
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charliemccraney
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Oil should not get all over with the rockers oiling as originally designed. It is when the shafts are pressurized that the oil overflows the head. Others will say otherwise but that is my firsthand experience. A restrictor placed at an area before the oil reaches the shaft should not cause it to flood.
Lawrenceville, GA
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DANIEL TINDER
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So, if plenty of oil gauge pressure, and oil doesn't overflow the heads (test rpm/time?) then no restrictors likely needed. Makes sense.
6 VOLTS/POS. GRD. NW INDIANA
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PF Arcand
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70 psi sounds a bit unusual. Wonder if it might be a concern because of the possibility of erosion. Has the pump been modified? As I understand it, volume is more important than pressure. I might be inclined to hook up a 2nd gauge temporarily.. Than again maybe it's just fine?..
Paul
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55vickey
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I'm running 70-75 on the road and 50 at idle with 10w40 oil. 5,000 miles on the engine, it 1st fired up at those numbers and they've never really changed. Good flow at the rockers so I'm happy with those #'s. Gary
Gary, 55 Vicky, St. Germain, Wisconsin
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HT32BSX115
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Howdy,
Before you get too excited about your pressure, you might try a different gage to verify that you in fact do have "high" oil pressure!
Regards,
Rick
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1955 F-600/272/E4OD// Disclaimer: No animals were injured while test driving my F-600 except the ones I ran over intentionally!
--------------------- This post was created using OpenSuSE Linux x64 and Firefox
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John Mummert
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Higher than normal oil pressure can be an indication of tight bearing clearance. Just because you have 70psi doesn't mean that oil is moving across the bearings. Pressure doesn't guarantee flow. In a worn out engine oil is flowing very quickly due to extra clearance. The pump can't keep up and pressure drops. Insufficient side clearance on the rods can raise oil pressure but can also burn up bearings due to a lack of oil flow. If the oil can't flow through the bearings it stagnates and eventually overheats. Since you probably don't have an aftermarket crankshaft its doubtful that the beariings are tight at the rod journal radius. I agree, drain the oil in a clean pan and look for debris and signs of overheated oil.
http://ford-y-block.com 20 miles east of San Diego, 20 miles north of Mexico 
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