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Who has NEVER had a cam or lifter go bad?

If you’re referring to the flat spot on the outer lifter body, from what I can tell, it is just a minor flat spot below the oil band. This allows some oil to leak past and go down to the lobe. I can’t find an off the shelf Big Block lifter with that, I figure a machinist that does lifter refacing may also be able to do it.
If I were to switch to a different solid flat tappet, I could use my current lifters after resurfacing or my set of OEM Mopar solid lifters that came with the ‘528 cam I bought in 2014. I’d have a machinist put a flat groove in those. I’m only guessing but it seems that any measure of increased oiling to the lobes is a good thing.
No, the face looks flat, I couldn’t see any oscillation of lifter. I would think it would rock back and forth to make a curved crown. The lifter holder tied together to the grinder
 
I don't understand any of what you wrote there.
I was focused on this:

1738982417540.png


That flat spot is machined into the area below the oil band/recesses in the lifter body. The EDM solid lifters have the hole in the foot of the lifter but the hydraulics can't have that or they would not build pressure. The workaround is to mill a small flat spot on the outer body. This won't affect the internal pressure of the lifter yet still increase oil supply to the cam lobes.
 
I don't understand any of what you wrote there.
I was focused on this:

View attachment 1802254

That flat spot is machined into the area below the oil band/recesses in the lifter body. The EDM solid lifters have the hole in the foot of the lifter but the hydraulics can't have that or they would not build pressure. The workaround is to mill a small flat spot on the outer body. This won't affect the internal pressure of the lifter yet still increase oil supply to the cam lobes.
In the 3 vidios the company that was grinding the lifters.
 
I would not use the lifters in post #102. The chamfer on the base is huge & with a cam that is designed to use the full lifter diam, the lifter could dig into the lobe. The machined flat. I have been doing that for 30 yrs using a Dremel with a cut off wheel, no need to pay 'extra'.
 
I sure don't trust myself to "Dremel" a flat spot in a lifter!
The Southern guy that makes the videos for Powell had one video discussing the chamfer at the outer edge of the lifters and how some are beveled a LOT more than others. Interesting stuff...
 
With the Dremel, you grind a slot, not a flat. Same thing is achieved: a small supply of positive oil to the lifter base.

DSCN0267[1].JPG
 
What about the edge of that groove? Do you smooth it out with some Emery cloth or something to chamfer the edges?
 
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