I went ahead and bought the bearings. As well as some nice new rocker shafts as I found mine pitted. I just hope I don't blow something up.
There is no reason at all that you should blow anything up - check the oil hole orientation on the shafts and you cannot go wrong.
You do however have an interesting little task in front of you. If your old shafts were pitted, then your rocker bearings are in need of replacement, they are expensive little suckers too.
Hopefully your Torrington bearing kit will tell you how much needs to be machined off te ends of the rockers to provide clearance for the beatings, shims and spacers, if not your will need to give the whole kit to your machinist so that they can measure it and work it out for themselves.
In all seriousness, if the seller will accept returns, send the damm things back, they will not provide any improvement in performance or service life whilst providing another thing to check and adjust.
If you are going to change the rocker bearings yourself you need a biggish bench vice, a piece of steel bar turned to the same diameter as the rocker shaft and some thin sleeves (preferably hardened) for pressing the old bearings out and the new ones in. Go slow and use white lead to lubricate the new bearing shells being pressed in. Also the end walls of the bearings are way to thin and fragile to tolerate being pressed in whist unsupported, you must put all the rollers in so that both ends of the housing share the load.
Lastly, when you buy your bearings, make sure the supplier has more in stock, you are probably going to be buying a couple more when you break them during assembly.
Lastly, best of luck.