This was kind of crazy lol, but we drilled and tapped the block for oil squirters. With the plan to be running high compression with sometimes questionable octane fuel, and also hopefully run road race and full mile events, I wanted to help this thing out as much as possible.
Also with the dry sump I want to run some serious crankcase vacuum. It is a concern to run high vacuum as you lose the splash oiling on the pins and you might wind up welding a pin to the rod and throwing it out the block.
This was a nice kit, but rather sketchy lol. Thankfully...no harm no foul and the block is drilled and tapped for 8 squirters.



The hole is drilled into the main journal for oil feed, and an oil squirter jet is screwed into there. It protrudes through the other side of the web, and the angle of the jet makes it spray the underside of the piston. It cools the entire underside of the piston as it goes up and down the oil crosses back and forth.
So this was the final step needed before sending the block out to machining. Didn't exactly want to have the block machined and then break a tap off in the main web or something stupid....
We use Dougan's Race Engines in Socal for our race engines. These guys are CRUSHING it in trophy truck races right now. They pretty much have booked themselves solid with their own race engine program and have turned away outside work. Luckily my dad was able to call them up and they agreed to keep doing our race engines. These guys are the ones out front coming 1, 2, and 3 every event.
http://dougansracing.com/Machine work wasn't too serious. We had them clip the deck to true it up, honed the bores to the new pistons, and they needed to hone the rods to fit the new pins. When I torqued the ARP bolts in the rods they didn't distort so the big end did not need to be machined. The mains were also true and did not need an align hone.
Everything is done with machining and we've started with mock up. Once everything checks out the rotating assembly can go out for balance.