If it’s a flat tappet cam, you need to follow these steps very carefully to make sure your cam survives break in.
1. Make damn sure you are on #1 TDC
2. prime oil pump.
3. drop distributor in and make damn sure your rotor is at #1 terminal and firing order is correct. Tighten distributor mostly but loose enough to turn by hand.
4. Make sure oil and water are full.
5. have timing light already hooked up and ready to rock.
6. have screw driver handy to adjust carb idle to hold it at 2k rpms for you.
7. fill carb float bowl so engine fires as quickly as possible.
8. have a helper crank engine while you are under the hood and adjust distributor if needed. The minute it fires and you show oil pressure, bring idle up to 2k rpms and adjust idle screw to hold it there. Check timing. My rule of thumb is as long as it’s in the 10-15 degrees before TDC, you’ll be all set. Let it sit there for 10-15 minutes at 2k to break in cam and lifters. I do rap the throttle from time to time to vary the rpms.
9. keep an eye on engine temp and oil pressure. It will get hot quick and as long as you aren’t over 210-215 degrees water temp, keep it running. You don’t want to shut it down for anything unless damage from heat, oil loss etc is imminent.
10. Shut it down and let it cool. Restart, adjust carb, timing too off fluids. Go for a ride. Vary speed, don’t be afraid to feed it the beans but do go floating the valves right off. But varying load and rpms are what set the rings in.
It’s stressful but an awesome feeling when the motor lights right off and you get a good break in.
Hope this helps and good luck. Oh, buy the zinc additive or run rotella T 15w-40 diesel oil for break in to help the lifters break in. New oils don’t have zinc which is an additive for flat tappet cam wear.
ben.