Oh boy, the valve train gremlins. Not worry, there are many little details to attend to with the valve train. As for your direct question about what pushrods to use and/or length; the best thing you can do is spend ten dollars and get a pushrod length guage. It is a little plastic part that slides onto the rocker stud. It will come to rest with one leg on top of your valve stem. The other leg will give you a measurement point. The tool should have one adjustable pushrod, kind of like a tierod. your cam needs to be on base circle with the lifter in place. then all you have to do is put the pushrod in and adjust to zero slack. then remove the guage tool and push rod. presto you have the perfect length pushrod to measure for your order. There are so many tolerance issues between cams, even from the same manufacturer, that inorder to get an accurate length you will need to measure for EVERY CAM!!! Getting the right length keeps you from pushing the valve sideways. The valve train will more effeciant, equals more power but not much. The best benefit is less valve guide wear resulting in an engine that does not smoke after 15,000 miles. As for what pushrods to order, going with what the head manufacturer says is generally safe. Different valve springs require different strength pushrods. Stronger may not always be better. Pushrods are kind of a fail-safe in my book. It is easier and cheaper to replace a pushrod or 50 than it is to have a piston smack a valve and waste your motor. Strange things happen like timing chains that skip or brake. You should and hopefully never have to find out what that is like. Bottom line, guage for the right pushrod and order what Edelbrock says is good! I hope you have fun wrenching and driving it later!!! Best of luck, Brian




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