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Well I've done the opposite a couple times...Olds in. If you have a donor truck with a Chevy engine in it your all set. Take the mounts from the other one & go. As for the brace at the trany...I don't know (assuming this truck was a diesel) they had some items the gas ones didn't, if the Chevy powered truck doesn't have it, I wouldn't worry about it. If you have the battery tray, engine compartment harness, ect. it would make it a little easier/nicer, if not, some wiring adjustments will be needed. For your valve lash, there are a few ways to do it. Assuming it's a hydraulic cam, prime the oil system with a drill. If you get a Chilton/Motors or rebuild manual for any Small block Chevy, it will be in there. One easy to understand, but more time consuming method is....when a cylinder's intake valve is a max lift, adjust the exhaust. When the exhaust is a max lift, adjust the intake. Roll the pushrod between your finger & thumb & tighten the adjusting nut, once you can not rotate it, go a quarter turn more. If you have a solid lifter cam, the order is the same, but you will need to check with the cam company for the lash spec. & use a feeler gauge. I'm assuming your using the trany from the Chevy engine, if not, you will need an adapter plate. As for the pulley grooves, just install the accessories on the engine & eye it up, it will be pretty obvious at this point. Hope this helps, Lorne
The harness you have in the truck will work fine. They (one who converted to gas) got the HEI wire connector there. The starter, alternator, ect. connections are the same, just bundled differently. The oil, water sensors from the Olds will go in your engine. If you have a nice un-cut gas harness for the Chevy engine, I would check the pin location at the bulkhead connector for wire match-up & use it if the important ones match (change as needed). I mentioned the battery tray due to putting the battery on the same side as the starter to eliminate the cable being way long. Lorne
For your valve lash, there are a few ways to do it. Assuming it's a hydraulic cam, prime the oil system with a drill. If you get a Chilton/Motors or rebuild manual for any Small block Chevy, it will be in there. One easy to understand, but more time consuming method is....when a cylinder's intake valve is a max lift, adjust the exhaust. When the exhaust is a max lift, adjust the intake. Roll the pushrod between your finger & thumb & tighten the adjusting nut, once you can not rotate it, go a quarter turn more. If you have a solid lifter cam, the order is the same, but you will need to check with the cam company for the lash spec. & use a feeler gauge.