Ahh but this is so much more fun than an engine swap! As for having the courage it certainly is a leap of faith. I sometimes wonder if it's going to work at all or more correctly what critical part I've put in wrong that's going grenade the engine 20 hours in.
I may have to lay off for the next week or two, got some tests coming up but I made good progress this weekend.
This was unfortunately the best picture I got of a series (just got a new camera phone) but you may be able discern a healthy sheen of rust. We had a sudden warm spell last week, it was almost 60F. The first two days I noticed condensation on my truck's exterior (parked in the barn with the tractor) but thought nothing of it. Between the persistent wetness and the salty air from the truck every exposed steel surface rusted. Thankfully the head and gasket provided enough of a seal that most of the deck and head didn't rust.
Unfortunately one corner was apparently propped up slightly and though it's hard to see in the pic the forward most lifter bore rusted all the way down. The cam and journals were coated with motor oil so they're fine. I pulled the cam again and made a little tray with paper towels and then went at the bore with scotchbrite. It cleaned up fairly easily to my relief and I'm confident I caught most of the scotchbrite particles. Hopefully any that escaped will pass through the oil pump without too much of a fight. I did learn that my assembly lube turns sticky after a while and while would probably be fine I'd prefer at add it the same day I start it so final installation of the head will be one of the last things I do.
To ensure I don't end up doing that again I reinstalled the valve cam with a new tab washer, smothered everything in engine oil and dropped in the lifters. I got four new lifters because as mentioned before two of the old lifters showed abnormal wear patterns. The old lifter on the far right shows normal wear, it was rotating properly. 2nd from the right shows concentric scoring probably a result of excess valve load because of the overheat. On the two new ones to the left you can see the very slight taper ground into the lifter (larger dull area). When the cam lobe starts raising the lifter this results is a small turning force to rotate the lifter. The point of this is to even out wear on both the cam and lifter and more importantly to allow oil into the contact point. They tend to be touchy and are sensitive to proper break in, roller lifters are superior in every way except for cost which is one reason they are used on the fuel pump.
I was never thrilled with the way the new gasket fit so instead I used an instant gasket maker a friend told me about called Hylomar. After application it dries to a tacky film within a minute or so and upon installation the pressure causes it to flow into the gaps. It has the advantage being reusable, I can take a part off, and reapply without issues. I did a few test installations of the gear case to test this and it worked fairly well. I also learned that you can't reliably install the spacer the front oil seal runs on from the front. It almost has to be inserted from the inside and then slid over the end of the crank as the gear case is installed otherwise you risk the spring popping out of the seal.
I discovered I made a slight boo boo. This is the end of one of two helical gears that drive the tachometer. It fits into a slot in the end of the fuel cam and apparently it was misaligned during one of my test fits. It's bent and the tip is indented in two spots. I wet a rag, wrapped the gear and then heated the end with a MAPP gas torch and beat it relatively flat again. I then locked it in a vice and straighted it as best I could and ground the edges straight. It's not great and I'll have to check it after the initial break in but if it doesn't work I just take out the gear til I can get a used part (new not available).
I didn't get a chance to an after pic as everything was covered in white lithium grease shortly after but I installed the gear case tach drive and all. My new key didn't fit into the slot in the crank due to interference from the oil seal spacer but a little grinding and it squeezed into place. Locked the pulled down with my homemade "wrench" to a torque of about 10 hammer blows. Heh, I'm thinking I got around 150 ft-lbs on the nut. I used the old lock washer tab but on this one I had to option of bending a different section of the tab.
I think I showed this before but it's rather confusing so its worth repeating. These are the governor springs. The little one attached to the right arm (from this perspective) is called the start spring by Kubota and attaches to a stud on the gear cover. I believe it adds more fuel at cranking speeds to aid startup but I'm not positive on that. The larger one on the left attaches to the throttle arm as serves to counter the force generated by the fly weights behind the fuel cam gear.
I dropped the head in place, attached the intake and exhaust manifolds and put the valve cover in place just to remind myself how an engine is suppose to look. The head still looks a little rusty but that's mostly a trick of the camera.
Finally I reattached the front axle and put her down on all four feet again. Now I'm back where I was in April. Next I need to reinstall the radiator, refill the transmission and install the shifter plate, finish rebuilding and install the steering box followed by fuel tank, dash and wiring. After that I can finally install the head, check the injection timing, prime the oil pump, install the exhaust and fire it up assuming nothing else comes up.