David Gentleman wrote:Except you would have to worry about the inlet manifold lining up again across both heads, elongating the holes in the timing chain cover, skimming the top of the timing cover so the rocker covers still fit, oh and hoping on an evenfire that the dizzy oil seal in the timing cover doesnt leak oil into the dizzy cap as you have just made the drive shaft 1mm off centre to the seal, pushing on one side and distorting it, along with the fact that your rotor arm is now spinning off centre to the dizzy cap too, and seeing as there is about a 10th of a mm between the tip of the rotor and the electrodes, will smash into half of them....
..or you could get round it by cutting up your covers and welding them back together..
1) No, there's plenty of slop in the timing cover mounts to allow for a mm of variation at the head - go look at one. There's plenty of room in the intake manifold mounts to account for a mm variation too. Just use decent O-Rings
2) the rocker covers seal fine if you use rubber gaskets or RTV
3) The question was directed at an atmo (althgouh he said "even fire atmo" I took this as a mistake?) so the even fire oil seal is a moot point, and as I said, you need to time up the cams manually afterwards to account for the variation. This means pressing out the locking pin in the sprockets and using a dial gauge and degree wheel and locking them down with the bolt. Trust me, it works, got the tee-shirt.
All of DMC Houston's Stage II engines have a mm taken off the heads. Kevin @ Gto went even further, IIRC.