Many people only use the outer springs (of the "dual springs") to do cam break-in with. Yet in prior times, I never read of doing such, unless it was a very picky builder.
I remember reading that the original 440 6bbl cam was a "low taper" cam, to allow for great spring pressures. Matching lifters were needed for such, too. At the time, I took that to mean "greater contact area" to spread the load of the stronger springs more. The flat tappets need to turn as they go up and down to minimize wear, which is what the crown does.
You're worried about flat tappet lifters and cams, I have seen the many videos on the Gen III Hemi lifters, plus knowing about the multitude of OEM lifter failures on Chevy roller-tappet engines, even going back to the 5.7L engines of the 1990s. So roller lifters are not a complete answer, either, from what I've seen.
Watch the videos of Mr. Lake Speed, Jr., in his various evolutions over the years. From when he was actively involved with NASCAR (as in with his father), then his later gigs with Joe Gibbs Racing (where he developed the Driven brand of motor oils), then to his current gig with Total Seal Piston Rings and being involved in Speediagnostics. Plus his videos on the Porsche Club involvements.
One of the things he mentions is that zddp ALONE is not the miracle item many perceive it to be, but when the rest of the total additive package is designed around it, THEN best wear protection can result. In the comparison of the Castrol GTX and "prior levels" of zddp in their GTX Classic oils, the interesting thing is that crankshaft bearing wear also decreased with higher zddp levels.
I had already read (
www.bobistheoilguy.com forums) that too much zddp degraded the detergency additives. As some of the NASCAR oils had up to 3000ppm of zddp, but after that 500 miles, they would be drained, so the detergency items were not as important as in a 4000mile oil change interval normal engine, that sees a multitude of temperature cycles.
One of this more unusual orientations is that "pout-into" additives are not nearly as good as having an oil where they are already blended into the oil product. I agree with this, to a point.
I would say to keep on your current path. Using plenty of moly paste on the cam lobes and back of the timing sprocket and on the timing gears' teeth. With the non-adjustable Chrysler valve train, I suspect this can be a bit of over-kill, but doable. An old Sig Erson Cams instruction sheet mentioned pouring 2 pints of the old GM Engine Oil Supplement (the thick version) over the cam lobes, too. I'm not sure if that GM product still exists!
KEY thing is that the engine fires after one or two revolutions so that whatever pre-lube is on the cam lobes is not wiped from them with cranking and no oil being slung onto the cam lobes by the crankshaft. Then the 20-30 minutes of run time at 2000-2500rpm.
Take care,
CBODY67