Some years ago I did an FE engine build-up article for Mustang Illustrated Magazine at Roush's Prototype Engine Facility, the formal name, at the time, for the build location of all his NASCAR engines.
Among other additions, we re-did the oiling of a 'center-oiler' block. Part of the work was to use roller cam bearings. Doing so necessitated boring the cam tunnel to afford the extra diameter of the roller bearings, and re-grooving the bulkheads. The end result was that no oil escaped at the cam bearings---it all went to the mains, which was the idea in the first place.
The re-boring meant that the diameter of the hole at the last cam journal was enlarged and the 'normal' cup plug was unusable. The solution was to use a plug intended for a 385-series engine. But a cup plug intended to go in 'backwards' comes with the flange shaped differently than the usual. The solution is to bore a hole in a piece of half-inch plate, so sized that the plug, when pushed through, comes out the other side properly shaped to be inserted into the FE block. And the Roush guys used two-part epoxy to make sure it wouldn't come out, just as they were doing on a weekly basis with the NASCAR engines.
KS