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292 grenaded

Started by hogwagon, 2011-02-22 23:37

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canadian_ranchero

Quote from: hogwagon on 2011-03-05 22:39
After reviewing the condition of what we have for a driveline and listening to what you have been kind enough to share as far as an upgrade we put out some feelers and a friend has a son with a rolled 96 Mustang and a loss of drivers licence. The car is a 5.0L 5 speed. I haven't seen it yet but am trying to find out what to look for, how much can I use. Since its rolled I can't believe the basic structure or sheet metal are a concern. Any ideas/input much appreciated.
if it is a 96 gt it will have a 4.6 2 cam.the 99 and up 2 cams make more high rpm hp.the 2 cam does fit better in a 57[i test fitted a 2 cam at the same time i fit my 4 cam]get the hydra boost,if you want power brakes

hogwagon

C-R the high rpm horse power number isn't as important as towing rpm torque numbers. I just ran thru the 11 pages of 4.6 convertions that you guys did here last summer. Is your car running now? This is just short of making me nervous about an overhead cam engine convertion put we need almost everything so it's work and fab everthing either way. I have a vertical mill and lathe so not a lot really scares me unless it is going to be 100's of hours for too little return. We owned a 97 MK VIII that had computer issues and currently drive a 2003 Mercury Marauder weather permitting so I am fairly familiar with the engines. We haven't seen the possible donor Mustang yet but am led to believe the car is a 5 speed manual. would that help as far as computer control ed wiring is concerned? The hydro boost brake system sounds cool as long as I don't have to have anti lock brakes.

hogwagon

Sounds like the donor Mustang in question may be a 1994. When did Ford change the car to 4.6 L engines? According to the chart in the new section we have under Borg Warner Trans ID it may be a T 5 which would work into our plans pretty good and I have been led to believe that if I get  5.0 or 302 in old man speak to work in the car that a 351 would bolt in as a replacement using the same accessory drives, mounts and such. Am I missing a big piece thinking this? I see that a 351 has a taller deck height and wider intake and I went thru this with a Dodge engine once with a 383 to 440. It was NOT a easy change as I was to believe.

Ford Blue blood

The 351 should be a bolt in.  Everything is exactly (nearly so) the same.  The extra inch of dech height does not present a problem.  Several of the guys here have 351Ws in their cars.  I will be installing a 351C/AOD in mine and it measures up to be a very nice fit.  96 was the first year for the mod motor in the GT Mustangs.  They (2 cams) are the same width as the 4 cam motors.  Not sure what year the bell housing bolt pattern changed though.
Certfied Ford nut, Bill
2016 F150 XLT Sport
2016 Focus (wife's car)
2008 Shelby GT500
57 Ranchero
36 Chevy 351C/FMX/8"/M II

canadian_ranchero

the 4 cam is about 2inch wider than the 2 cam.the oil pans are different 302/351[rear main bigger]the accessory drive is a little different because of the higher heads,the 81 and newer 302 have a different balance[flywheel]than the 351.mounts are the same,bell housing the same 302/351. just some info that may help   

Ford Blue blood

I do stand corrected on the overall width of the 4 cam.  At the motor mount area they are the same.  The after market accessories/drives are the same for the 66 and later are the same (year dependent) 289, 302, and 351W and C.  You need to check the spacing between the face of the balancer, 3 or 4 bolt and the face of the water pump flange, (3 1/4" or 3 3/4"), that changed around 68 - 69 and when they went to serpentine things got different again. We are currently assembling an 85 351 W using late model 302 (early 90s Mustang GT) brackets for the serpentine drive system, all is bolted up and fits fine, the belt that came off the 302 is too short so we will need to find one the correct size.  Over all the fit of things is good, just need to watch the year.
Certfied Ford nut, Bill
2016 F150 XLT Sport
2016 Focus (wife's car)
2008 Shelby GT500
57 Ranchero
36 Chevy 351C/FMX/8"/M II

hogwagon

 Really great info and is helping a lot to keep from just buying stuff just to try. My garage space, time, and money really doesn't work well with a lot of stuff anymore. I am reading out of this that if I stay with the 302-351W series of engines after serpentine belt accessories with a front sump pan and Mustang bellhousing transmission it's normal fab work with options that are supported by the aftermarket or Ford sourced parts.
This is right where I was hoping all of this would lead. The wagon was the wife's idea and 57 Ford was mine. If it was a single purpose vehicle built strictly on my tastes it would be a post car with a big block. After this build that may happen.

Frankenstein57

I'm curious if you are leaning toward efi, or a carb?  Mark

hogwagon

At this point it depends a lot on the donor car. If EFI and complete I would love to do a complete transplant. We have 2 late model vehicles and one old car that is carb but it doen't see much use. The challenge has a lot of appeal and of course the attention factor at cruise night sounds fun. This car will see a lot of use from the wife so dependable easy to live with are big. Steering and brakes are before power on this one. Power brakes= vacume. The car dictates again. In the 4.6 convert forum this point was well taken. Fuel milage is on everyones mind so EFI with factory Mustang pieces makes sense. Easy to say before the event but with some help from you guys it is in reach for anyone here.

Ford Blue blood

I put an 87 Continental 302 (speed density EFI) with a 5 speed in a 66 Falcon Ranchero and that thing was/is the perfect set up.  The speed density is simple, works well with manual or the AOD, gave an honest 30 MPG @ 70 MPH on the road and very high teens/low 20s in town (depending on the right foot) and never failed to start and run smooth.  Didn't have a "thumper" sound but made plenty of power and was fun to drive.  I would do it again in a heart beat!  Will as a matter of fact, have a 60 Galaxie 2Dr wagon that will get a 2001 Explorer 302/auto complete with the EFI and all the trimings.  Will run the HiPo 289 exhaust manifolds, no cats and get the computer programmed to ignor the after cat o2 sensors and such.  Go for it, you can not beat the drivability of the EFI controlled engines!
Certfied Ford nut, Bill
2016 F150 XLT Sport
2016 Focus (wife's car)
2008 Shelby GT500
57 Ranchero
36 Chevy 351C/FMX/8"/M II

hogwagon

Bill this sounds like the setup we are striving for. I'm sure I will have to bug you with a ton of questions on his one. In hurry up and wait as one vehicle is in the selling mode to fund the next and we are hoping to get to see the possible donor car this weekend. I may have to find storage for one car here to have space to dissect a donor car. I do not leave stuff outside as we are in the city plus I learned to hate the look if you don't have a secluded yard to do work in. As in probably most peoples case I am the most apprehensive about the wiring and computer work.

hogwagon

Decent weather so the garage can be open and a rare day off allowed me to investigate the transmission and shine some light on why the engine blew up. A syncro blocker ring is broken for high gear and it will not go into 3rd so I think some one drove the car home in second and with a 3:55 rear end it was wound pretty tight. The engine dropped a exhaust valve head and trashed the block. I can fix the trans if someone needs it as all the gears look good, but may not be worth it for our needs. The donor car we were looking at has a reluctant seller so a 351 truck 2 wheel drive may be the next candidate. Suspension is next anyway since I finally have most off the dirt off of the front end. I got a free field of dirt from Nebraska in the deal.

Ford Blue blood

The wiring is not so hard.  The nice part of the speed density system is most all the engine management wiring is bundled seperate from the rest of the car.  Aways get the wiring diagrams from Helm Inc. for the donor car.  Figuring which terminals are needed is a matter of looking at the sensor or device.  Those that tell the computer something have a source voltage (5.5V) on one lead and the other lead goes to the computer.  Things the computer tells the engine to do have a lead from the computer and a ground on the other end.  There are a few exceptions to this rule but they become self appearent.  There are very good tutorials on line, just google EFI and you can spend a week reading and learning various systems.  Many basic learning tools as well.  I say all of this as an electronics technician so what is clear to me may be a bowl of soup to others.  If all else fails go to an after market supplier.
Certfied Ford nut, Bill
2016 F150 XLT Sport
2016 Focus (wife's car)
2008 Shelby GT500
57 Ranchero
36 Chevy 351C/FMX/8"/M II

hogwagon

Ford Blue Blood  That info is pure gold as to the theory of 5.5 volts to computer input and to ground if from computer then control at engine if I am reading this right. Many years ago I received a Associate in E.E.T. that was used to be able to communicate with computer engineers and the new Harley's are EFI so do have to deal with some of this in our business. I know many people are phobic about all of this but with a little self education it doesn't have to be that way. If you understand the basics of carbs and ignition it translates with a little help from someone like yourself.
I have a ton of electrical questions but this may not be the right place. Do we have a forum for this subject and conversion yet?