Midget,
Some quick thoughts on your disassembly photos:
1 Steel cam + steel thrust plate = non-compatibility. Probably need a bronze or silicon aluminum bronze thrust plate to bear against
the steel cam thrust face. How much end play did the cam have on build-up? (should be .003"/.005") These types of material
compatibility problems are common when "upgrading" parts. Guys put titanium valves in cast iron guides & then wonder why the
valves seize in the guides, regardless of clearance. Does APT have a non-steel cam thrust plate? Now you know how steel friction
welding works.
2 Flat tappet cam lobes are ground at a shallow angle, which combined with radiused bottoms (75 inch radius) of the tappets, is what
induces the tappets to spin. That prevents the tappets from wearing out too quickly. This is why the wear/scuffing is on only one
side of the cam lobes. Inspection of the scuffing with a 10x/20x magnifier probably will reveal the actual metal failure condition and
the root cause. Refer to my PM.
3 Tappets look better than I thought they would. If they still have a radius they probably can be polished & reused.
4 Was block line-bored or line honed after the main cap strap was fitted? You may want to check the main bearing housing bore sizes
with the main caps/strap torqued in place to be certain they are within spec.
5 There are a few oil passages in the block that are impossible to clean unless the brass plugs are removed for a thorough cleaning. Not
just the main oil galleries, you must include the sub-galleries as well. The oil pressure relief valve bleed galleries of BMC's can send
loads of swarf and grit back into the oil pan. Cleanliness before and during assembly is more important than most builders think it is.
Proper cleaning requires brushes/solvents/compressed air/pressure washer to loosen/remove stubborn deposits of debris. You will
want to disassemble your oil pump to check the internals...as any swarf that made it the main/rod bearings went through the pump
first. What sort of swarf is in the oil filter element? You may want to consider blocking the oil filter bypass if you have not done so
already.
6 The salts used in nitriding/"Tufftriding" can remain in the crankshaft oiling passages/holes. It is extremely abrasive. Metal gun
cleaning brushes can remove it.
7 The only other talent for engine builders I heartily recommend is a masterful command of the language and slang. I swear by it.

Fordboy