As it's my first engine completely disassembled, well, I have to do it the other way around without doing anything stupid.
So I'm going slowly, I've got some literature, I'm gleaning information right and left, and come what may.
I will be a long reassembly, but I prefere that at the end the engine starts.
I have yet to read the responses of my fellow enthusiasts, so the following "may" have already been said. If it is repetitive, my apologies, but you can take as it being important enough advice to listen to and heed. The building and assembling of an engine ought not be looked as a competitive sport in terms of how fast you ought to go. Not at your end of the spectrum. It is best to leave the fast paced engine repairs to the highly experienced racing car crew members in the pits.
- Take your time, think things through between the moments you are reading about any particular step, and the moments you are preparing to execute your next action.
- If you are using a traditional Flat Tappet Cam/Lifters valvetrain, be sure to use an engine oil with Zinc in it. Otherwise you will end up wearing your camshaft lobes down to a nubs, and wearing your lifter contact surfaces into a dished face, very quickly. Zinc is not typically used in engine oil any longer as it fouls catalytic converters, and is not needed for the more modern roller lifters of newer engine design. If your oil does not have Zinc you can use a Zinc Oil Additive. I personally use AmsOil "Z-Rod" 10/30 synthetic engine oil, as its formulation does have Zinc. There are other excellent brands of oil that also include Zinc.
- When you are preparing to install the pistons and connecting rods take the time to slip some rubber vacuum or fuel hose over the connecting rod threaded bolt ends so you do not end up nicking the crankshaft and/or cylinder walls.
- Dip the pistons (with rings installed) into a can of engine oil before installing said piston/rod assemblies into the engine to help ensure adequate oil lubrication for the pistons and rings in the newly honed cylinder walls. You can never get too much initial lubrication for the various moving parts of the engine.
- Follow the installation and break-in instructions of the camshaft and lifter manufacturer carefully.
- Take care to not damage the camshaft bearings as you carefully install the camshaft.
- You will want to prime the oil pump by spinning the oil pump drive shaft manually (while the distributor out of the engine) before you crank it over to fire up the engine. Priming the oil pump will also help get engine oil to the various items needing to be lubricated before initially cranking over, much less running, the engine. You never want to do a dry start on an engine, as it will cause avoidable and excessive wear in the young engine's life.
- If you are not familiar with how to perform Dead Stick Ignition Timing on an engine, please look at my video on the subject in the link below. If you are using an electronic ignition system the technique is similar, except you will be setting the triggering of the collapse of the Ignition Coil's electromagnetic field through visual observation of the stator wheel/reluctor and the pickup coil inside the distributor, as opposed the opening of the gap of the Ignition Points. Getting the initial timing set up correctly will make a big difference with how well (much less IF) the engine runs when you first fire it up.
Have fun, and best of luck to you.