You beat me to it. I went out and researched and was starting to understand. Just for my understanding though, how do you do this adjustment when the lifters could be all over the place? I mean, recent experience tells me that they tend to pump up and stay pretty solid for a long time. The measurement with new, dry lifters would be night and day compared to what you'd get after running then engine. Right?
Thinking it out, maybe I do understand. Even on a dry lifter, the spring will push it out to maximum length, so the zero lash baseline is relative to that. You are saying that you'd like the lifter to be compressed a minimum of 0.025" from it's maximum length. The 0.025-0.075" would be the range of the lifter to absorb slop and variation.
Is that the right way to think about it?
Anyway, yeah, I'll verify the pushrods look clean and straight and just see how it goes. If it makes noise I can work on it in the vehicle. 99% of people must be running factory lifters in these things...