I use a shop vacuum to get the air out of the system since some of the bleeder valves are hard to get at,it works on the generator too,some of those little engine can be a real pain to get the air out
Did the rebuilder test run/dyno the engine before giving it back to you? The engine can hold quite a bit of coolant down in the block even with the hoses disconnected.
Not being around Crowns much and not knowing the HVAC system setup,it could be a valve closed in loop or a booster pump is not working. If the engine is not running hot it has to be the HVAC system is air locked, I hook a wet/dry on the loop somewhere on the HVCA and suck the air out with the engine running, it doesn't take much vacuum to break the air lock if it is circulating with the valves open. The water pump on the engine circulates 65gpm so it will move coolant, another way to find a air lock is with a hand held IR thermometer find a cold spot with a hot spot with in a few inches of each other and sometimes just loosening a hose clamp in the area will start the flow. Not knowing your setup check the air compressor for overheating a lot of manufactures of the past would tie the air compressor into the HVCA loop and they would air lock, hope a rag didn't get into the system like Vans 8v92
Just run it and keep a eye on the coolant level the if it's air will work it's way out.
The engine was completely stripped down to a bare crankcase, and every piece was hot-tanked. There was nowhere for coolant to hide there! And yes, it was test-run for an hour or so on the work stand (after the entire fuel system had been pressure-tested). Besides, if coolant had managed to remain inside, then it wouldn't have been drained into the tote bin; our issue is that we cannot refill all of what was originally drained out.John
Not to speak for someone else, but I believe what was being said is that if the shop tested the motor for an hour, they probably put some coolant in it for the test. So maybe you received it with some coolant that was put in it after the rebuild. I'm not a mechanic, but it seems to me that if they are going to test a motor for an hour, it would need coolant for the test (?)
Are you getting good heat at all heaters and defroster? Lots of air, little to no heat. If you have no heat at defroster, high spot in loop, that's where the air is.