vettedog72, first, i cannot tell you specifics about the six since i am a four guy but the geometry etc is not specific when you look at push rod motors with , in our case, rocker shaft mounted rockers. second, valve lash clearance is set ONLY for the thermal expansion of the valve and valve train components so that, at hottest, operating temperature the valve will still close 100%. otherwise you can burn your valves,loose compression, and if the clearance is too much, you give away lift and duration at the VALVE as well as you can beat up your valve train with shock(if too loose), not good (we get this every time during warm up). the transmission of movement from the cam to the valve is NOT in direct proportion to the cam movement plus the quoted ratio of the rockers. there are two sides to look at. first the valve side. setting the height of the rockershaft by shimming or machining the pedestals and/or grinding the valve stem tops to get the roller tip to sweep from the outside of the valve stem to the inside where at 50% the roller tip contact is centered on the valve stem. this is the standard practice. but also the angle ,from the line from the center of the rockershaft to the valve stem contact when the valve is at 50% lift to the line on the centerline of the valve, should be 90 degrees. this gives the most valve displacement. second the cam side. the push rod goes through an angular movement with the rotation of the rocker as well. we need to leave the height that we set for the valve side alone because we want to keep the contact on the valve as close to center as possible to keep thrust from the stem to the guide as little as possible. the length of the pushrod does two things: it affects the angle the push rod is at AND the contact point of our adjuster which gives the true angle line from the rockershaft to contact point. this combination of lines,pushrod centerline to rocker line should also be 90 degrees at 50% lift for max optimization.
this is the standard optimization. this should come close with the rockers you buy without too much work but every engine is just a little bit different than the next. there is a new set-up you can read about in "circle track" magazine, jan 2006, that is very interesting and that we can probably duplicate because of the design of our motors.
pick it up and read before you bolt together. it is a good excercise to measure up accurately all the locations,lengths,angles, of you valve train and draw at about 4 times actual size and model the movement (ie each position of all the pieces at increments from full closed to full open). the only linear movement is the lifter and the valve. all the others are arcs. have fun
rob