Got started on the repair, but the weather isn't going to allow me to work. I started with the nomacast rods playing with some old junk. I welded on a section of cast iron pipe, brake rotor, cast iron lift block, and a bad engine rod. I've only got a Lincoln ac welder, but it seems that the rod worked best at 90amps. The cast iron pipe was the only one that I wondered about. The weld, not iron, cracked. A second pass cleared it up without a crack. The other stuff welded fine at 105 amps (it was thicker).
So I started prepping the block. I drilled out both ends of the crack. Then I took the dremel tool and grooved the crack. I then sprayed it all down with parts cleaner and brushed it with a SS brush. I got one tack in the middle of the hole before it started raining. I don't want to risk a raindrop cracking a hot weld, so I've postponed things for now. Tomorrow I've got to help move my sister, but maybe I'll get back in time to start working again on it.
The gameplan is to spot weld it very slowly. Grind the welds down flush. Fill the sides with jb weld. Cover with painters tape (to keep it from running). File the jb-weld smooth. Then coat the inside of the new liner with high temp silicone. Then fill the coolant system with just water and alumiseal. Since the engine runs cool, I'm thinking about running without the rad cap as well until everything is seated in. The welding session will take a while to do. But my tack was cool enough to touch in a minute or less. It appears the nomacast rods elasticity is great. Everything I did was without pre and post heat. I'm going to take it very slowly. It might take me working on and off all weekend to get this done. But I think it's worth a shot.