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Topic: Started - The Big Project (Read 2187 times) previous topic - next topic

Started - The Big Project

SO toward the end of last year my friend and I were on our way on the highway and almost to our destination.  Well we didn't make it there with my bird.  We ended up taking a $30 cab ride across the town we were in and the event we were going to.  My car was on the highway and almost there and all of a sudden poof.  Couldn't see behind and the car quit.  Popped it in nuetral roll up the on ramp and luckily made it to a parking lot.  Well I finally got to the bottom of it and found out that I melted a piston.  Now I am taking the motor out and doing alot of stuff.  Completely ripping out the Computer and going carb.  I will post pics of what I have started and the canage very soon.

Started - The Big Project

Reply #1
what do you have? so are you swaping a new/different motor or rebuliding?
1986 Cougar LS

Started - The Big Project

Reply #2
IMO, go with a good Used Ho block and go from there. Decient heads, roller cam, good bottom end.... it's a good starting point for not that much. Might just be what I do

Started - The Big Project

Reply #3
I have a 83 302 with CFI.  And I am not sure what I am gonna go with I may go roller I may not.


Started - The Big Project

Reply #5
Combined time to do carb for me was about 3 days of working streched over 3 months in winter. Not the hardest thing in the world do to. Motor wise though, I still stand by the roller motor. Built out of car and just drop in and go

Started - The Big Project

Reply #6
good god! you have a cluster **** there! good luck.
1979 Ford Fairmont
[/B]
5.0L/4R70W/8.8"/5-lug/3" Exhuast


Started - The Big Project

Reply #7
Why do you wanna go carb?

Started - The Big Project

Reply #8
Carb's old school,go mustang roller HO,you'll be better off.

Started - The Big Project

Reply #9
not to hijack, but I heard old school.  I'm going carbed as well....but I like to be different.
1987 TC

Started - The Big Project

Reply #10
I'm going carbed too, but I am biased.
Plus, finding an injection system for a Yates head Cup motor ain't easy nor cheap.....

Started - The Big Project

Reply #11
I'm going carbbed because I have more cam selection
'83 Cougar *the never ending project* warmed over 306 v8,c4,8.8 posi with 5 lug conversion
'91 mustang strictly street-in progress
'00 f150 7700-Mean Green: jet stage 1 chip,ported upper intake with 1" spacer,'04 Super Duty intake with injectors,summit racing short tube headers with true 2.5" duals with smithy's glasspacks!

 

Started - The Big Project

Reply #12
Quote from: 86Tbuzzard;146131
I'm going carbbed because I have more cam selection


Huh?! that has nothing to do with cam selection. you can have just as good of a cam if you kept it F.I. now Ford's speed density doesnt work too well with aftermarket cams, but Mass Air does.
1979 Ford Fairmont
[/B]
5.0L/4R70W/8.8"/5-lug/3" Exhuast


Started - The Big Project

Reply #13
Quote from: 32VFoxBird;146135
Huh?! that has nothing to do with cam selection. you can have just as good of a cam if you kept it F.I. now Ford's speed density doesnt work too well with aftermarket cams, but Mass Air does.

The cam I selected wouldn't work with it...had to get special pistons *deep relief* because of the valve lift. now I can argue over which fuel delivery system is better...had them both. but that'd open up a bigger can of worms, and not chocolate covered either.
'83 Cougar *the never ending project* warmed over 306 v8,c4,8.8 posi with 5 lug conversion
'91 mustang strictly street-in progress
'00 f150 7700-Mean Green: jet stage 1 chip,ported upper intake with 1" spacer,'04 Super Duty intake with injectors,summit racing short tube headers with true 2.5" duals with smithy's glasspacks!

Started - The Big Project

Reply #14
so a carb gives you better PTV clearance?! LOL!
1979 Ford Fairmont
[/B]
5.0L/4R70W/8.8"/5-lug/3" Exhuast