I do remember. I thought I was ready. I successfully blocked the oil at the corners. But I couldn’t protect the waterfall on the sides. But just the one side though.
Scott - your comment about being less aggressive with restricting was why I tried without restricting first. They’ll be easy enough to add now but I’m wondering about the high oil pressure and not enough flow on the drivers side right now.
SAE 30 oil is thick. I wouldn't recommend it at all for a break-in oil for a hydraulic roller engine. Oils such as a 5W-30, 10W-30, etc., essentially have dual personalities. They behave one way when it's cold and behave another when it's hot. Your cold SAE30 oil is probably to blame for the high pressure. If it were me, I'd ditch it and throw some Valvoline VR1 10W-30 non-synthetic in there, Driven 10W30, etc.
Put the restrictors in. Seriously, there's never been one single FE that I've not used restrictors in from the time I started building engines until now. There's no need to flood the entire top end with oil, even with factory rockers. The HV pump exacerbates this. Put the restrictors in. Put the restrictors in. If it's a bushed rocker or factory rocker, you can restrict down to .070"-.080". My longest running street engines are there. If it's a needle bearing rocker, you can go a hair tighter.
Once you've put the restrictors in

try it again, lay some shop towels in the troughs of the heads, then prime again and see what you get out of the other side.