RMBUILDER - Wow, those pictures bring back memories. We worked SOOOO hard to keep the whole project a secret for the 7 months it took to develop it that it's weird (even now) to see pictures of the valvetrain published. Uber-secret $hit, that stuff was....
I have a set of upper and lower rockers, a pushrod and a piston on my desk. I'll have to get some shots of them when I get back next week. By using the lower rockers, we were able to reduce both the length and the forces on the pushrods, allowing us to make them even lighter. The rockers had far less inertia than conventional lifters as well, all helping to reduce the valve spring load and rate requirements. The pushrods were made of a special steel alloy that expanded at the same rate as the aluminum block and heads, so you could set the valve lash when the engine was cold and it would not change at operating temperature. All lash adjustment was done with various thickness lash caps that fit on top of the valves, thereby eliminating setcrews, locknuts, etc. Again - less inertia, fewer parts, better packaging.
All the lower rockers, spacers and mounting blocks were fitted to the follower shaft in sequence, hand-packed with individual needles (no cages) and then the ends were electron-beam welded in place. The entire assembly was a non-serviceable, one-shot deal; we threw them away once they were mileaged out. The same was true with follower rollers on the lower rockers and the tip rollers on the upper rockers: hand-assembled with individual needles, the shafts inserted and electron-beam welded in place. Once and done. To this day, I remember: "1,280 1mm by 12mm needles per engine". So much attention was paid to reducing friction in the valve train that the engine guys had to install (and remove) the upper rockers in a certain sequence with the engine rotated to a specific position. If you got it wrong, the valve springs would actually spin the engine over, and it would spray oil freakin' e-v-e-r-y-w-h-e-r-e! (Ask me how we found out....)
The ports in the head were awesome: 100% round and 100% straight into the chamber. When you took the top off of the intake plenum and opened the throttle butterflies, you could see the entire top of the intake valve. The airflow numbers were (to say the least!) very, very good.
DONZI - We had to do all of our endurance testing on the racetrack, through one of the worst winters for snow ever in the NE. At one point, we had to get equipment from the Allentown airport to clear off the track at Nazareth. The very next year, we built a second, "simulation" dyno like the Honda one in your video. I would have killed to have that in 1994. We ran a 24/7 program, where then engine guys would come in and rebuild a test engine overnight and dyno it at 5:00 AM. The car guys would come in at 6:00 AM, put it in the car (still hot from the dyno), and we would load it in the truck and leave for Nazareth by 9:00 AM. We'd test from 11:00 AM until 5:00 PM (earlier if it failed), be back at the shop at 7:00 PM, deliver the engine to the engine shop by 8:00 PM, and start the process all over again. After all was said and done, we went to Indy and ran the entire month without blowing up a single engine - not one. We have never done that, before or since.
Miklos is right - Smokey wasn't the only one these engines damn near killed. But, Holy Mother Of God, did that thing run! (The fact that there are TWO injectors per cylinder should give you a clue....)