But I did get the wind in my sails last weekend with a few hours to spare, and tubes of all the required seals and lubricants.
I was a three aluminium washers short for the case perimeter nuts, so I drilled some aluminium sheet and the makeshift drill lathe came into service again.

I allowed four hours for the assembly, and spent the first of those looking for one single missing blue o-ring which i knew must be in the garage somewhere.
I elected to coat the o-rings on the through-bolts with silicone, as per Dempsey. These bolt holes double as oil tubes, exposed to full oil pressure, so require a reliable seal.

No con rod stands for me, just careful balancing, plus a daughter with a bent-over welding rod to hook the upper chain through the case at the crucial moment. In recent years I have noticed the usefulness of my belly as a third limb, and it faithfully served me in this endeavour to hold the central con rod vertical as the crank went into place.

The required torque did seem quite high, especially on the perimeter flange, but all the studs held perfectly and I was soon looking at an assembled short block and praising Mike Bainbridge's very kind advice regarding which studs to time-sert.

One slight question-mark remained. Dempsey said 23 flange nuts were required, which i set out carefully in advance as a way of ensuring every one was applied. By the end, one nut and one of my freshly-fashioned washers remained. It tentatively looks like the earlier cases have one fewer stud and nut than the later ones.
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