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| Need ram air info -- Kenny Sullens, 07/08/2001
I have found a repo ram air unit made of fiberglass. It comes with everything exept the snorkel and pvc piping. It cost $425. Is it ok to put a repo of the ram air on my 69 mach 1 r-code? Is it a good deal. Would it work? |
| headers for FE 390 -- Jerry, 07/08/2001
Where may I be able to purchase exhaust headers for a 1967 Mustang GT Fastback with 390 engine? |
| | It depends. -- Dave Shoe, 07/08/2001
The 352/390/410/410/428 got two types of heads in 1966-67. The type you have on your car will determine which header you want.
First off, I recommend FPA (www.fordpowertrain.com) because they have the best fitting, highest quality header for ya. They're not cheap, but they're still a value. The Tri-Y design seems to work as well today as it did for Shelby 35 years ago.
I run Hookers, but they crowd the engine bay a bit more, and they only fit some of the 390GT heads from 1966-67 and no 390GT heads from 1968.
Basically, if the head casting is the emissions-era C6AE-J, C6AE-U, C7AE-A, C8AE-H, or D2TE-AA, then you wanna run FPA's GT-type header. If it's the C6AE-R head, you'll wanna run the CJ-type of header.
It may sound confusing to hear that the C6AE-R head can deal with either the GT or the CJ type of Mustang header, but it works best with the CJ type.
I've gotta get a NICE digital camera so I can take some comparative photos of the exhaust ports on the head, but for now I'll just say that Ford repositioned the exhaust runner on "emissions era" FE heads so they mismatch pre-emissions heads (and also C6AE-R and CJ heads) by about 5/16". The mismatch causes more than porr flow, it also causes gasket leaks due to the poor gasket crush by the header's weld bead.
I don't presently have time to find a link to an old post which bertter describes this issue, but you might try searching this forum for the keyword "C6AE-R" or "reversion" to find some more info.
Shoe. |
| truck vs car exhaust manifolds -- Jim Knapper, 07/08/2001
A friend of mine just picked up a 64 Galaxie with a 352 under the hood. The previous owner had installed headers on the car and my buddy would like to remove them and install manifolds. I have a 68 F100 with a 360 in it, and have an extra set of exhaust manifolds. My question is will the truck manifolds work on his car? Thanks. |
| | RE: truck vs car exhaust manifolds -- BOB HOPKINS, 07/09/2001
Maybe yes/no nice answer huh? From whit I remember of the stock log mansfolds on a 64 Ford any other manafold that would bolt up will be a improvement. I think as long as bolt patterm is compatable and there is room between the head and A-arm will fit you will have to custom make exhaust pipes. |
| | RE: truck vs car exhaust manifolds -- Barry B, 07/09/2001
The truck manifolds have larger outlets and are angled differently than the car manifolds. You might be able to get the driver's side to work but I doubt the passenger side. |
| 427 Intake questions -- Tore, 07/07/2001
MY friend has some aluminum FoMoCO 427 Int.Manifolds and he was wondering what there worth. He has a 427 Med Riser Sidewinder Int with the word Cobra Embossed on it. He also wondered if it was what would come standard on a 427 Cobra. The other 2 are 427 Tunnelport dual quad. 1 is a single plane the other is a dual plane I heard this was rare. Any comments would be appreciated. |
| | RE: 427 Intake questions -- Royce Peterson, 07/08/2001
They should be worth about $500.00 each. Put them on E-Bay if you want top dollar.
Royce Peterson 68 Cougar GTE 427 XR-7 (two of them) 68 Cougar XR-7 428 CJ Ram Air |
| | $300-1500 in good shape... -- michael strunk, 12/21/2005
Most of the "cobra" labeled intakes were Shelby units made into the early 80's and not original Shelby 60's pieces. Buyer beware. Still cool. Just not old.
Are they Tunnel-Port or Tunnel Wedge intakes?
Tunnel Port intakes have the pushrod running straight through the intake runner and will only fit Tunnel Port heads. Tunnel wedge intakes have the pushrods running through the manifold just to the side of the port.
Tunnel Port intakes sell as high as $1500 mint and tunnel wedge sell at $500-750 (2005) |
| D2TE-AA heads combustion chamber -- Chuck Rozell, 07/06/2001
I rebuilt a 390 with d2te heads and wanted to know what is the cc of the combustion chamber. I have looked in older car manuals and see that the engine compression from 67 is 10.5 while 72 is 8.0 is this due to cylinder head size or piston size. This would give me a clue as to what compression ratio I have I put 11 to 1 pistons in but I am guessing this to be for 72 cc heads. Thanks Chuck |
| | RE: D2TE-AA heads combustion chamber -- RJP, 07/07/2001
Need to consider deck height, gasket volume, piston, combustion chamber, overbore and valve depth to calculate compresson ratio. Anything less is an excersize in futility. |
| | RE: D2TE-AA heads combustion chamber -- Dave Shoe, 07/07/2001
Ford officially rated the D2TE-AA heads the same as the C8AE-H heads of '68-'71. I forget the exact decimal places, but it was 68.1-71.x the best I can recall.
One thing to note is it seems Ford may have occasionally sampled the C8AE-H heads for chamber volume because of the 10.5:1 engines of the period, but some folks seem to have found the chamber volume of the D2TE-AA heads can step outside the factory specs. This may be due to the very low compression of the truck motors - a "cc" here or there wouldn't do much to affect engine operation, so the actual production line "cc" spec may have gone unmeassured in the truck-only years of the FE.
JMO, Shoe. |
| 1964 390 questions -- mrb, 07/06/2001
I was wondering if a 1964 390 would be a good basis for CJ heads or aftermarket, CJ cam or similar, if there is anything peculiar about the 1964 that cause problems, and whether or not the stock automatics they used then,which is NOT a C-6, would have problems with the added heat. thanks |
| | Stock heads are better than the CJ heads. -- Dave Shoe, 07/07/2001
In your case (1965 and earlier), the stock heads will breathe better than CJ heads.
The 428CJ got the same intake runners, exhaust runners, and valve bowls as your heads, but the CJ also got restrictive Thermactor emissions bosses cast into the roof of the exhaust runner. Assuming you install CJ-sized valves in your stock heads, the CJ would have to have the emissions bosses ground out to flow equivalently. Note that CJ heads are cast for the common FE valve sizes but are throat dressed at the factory to fit CJ-sized valves.
The reason the 428CJ is such a hot engine is it got an MR-style intake manifold, and those suckers flow like crazy. It also got satisfactorily designed unibody exhaust manifolds, which is something the 390 unibody cars did not get.
If you are looking for some extra zip from your full-sized Ford, then you should focus on the intake manifold, cam, lifters, and valve springs. An Edelbrock RPM intake would suit you well (even with the port mismatch), and the cam kit will finish it off.
Headers are kind of a radical upgrade, but they'll buy you lots of HP once the intake and cam is in.
The tranny should be able to handle what you give it. It's not as sturdy as a C-6 (and not nearly as fun to work on), but it's a tough tranny. You might find that it'll need fresh clutch plates (a standard rebuild kit) if you start pumping extra horsies through it.
I have heard some claims that the FMX tranny will fall apart with any kind of abuse, but I'm learning these are apparently incorrect statements. One thing I do know about your tranny is that since it's design is based on a 2-speed Fordomatic that got an extra gear grafted on, that it's a rather complicated tranny to "learn" on, as far as doing a clutch-replacement. I've never had any problems taking them apart, but I still can't figure how to get them together again. I'm sure my difficulty is partly because I mainly take FMXs apart to claim the cool-looking mainshaft and I don't actually attempt to reassemble them because I only use a C-6 or toploader in my cars. Still, the C-6 is much easier for the first-timer.
Shoe. |
| | | RE: Stock heads are better than the CJ heads.Shoe. -- mrb, 07/07/2001
Thanks for the information, I am suprised about the 390 head. I read somewhere one time about early 352 heads that had the same port dimensions as the CJ, but I wondered if the source was correct. Such being the case, I don't understand why they did not use the larger port head and better manifolds for the GT Mustangs and Fairlanes to make them a little stouter It would seem they stepped backwards when the street performance market was going full speed ahead. You mentoned CJ size valves, would this make a big difference? Do the early 390 heads have any value compared to the later ones? thanks again
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| | | | RE: Stock heads are better than the CJ heads.Shoe. -- Dave Shoe, 07/07/2001
Mid-1958 heads off a 332 FE would basically be the same as 1965-390 heads.
The emissions years started in 1966, as did the unibody years for the FE. The unibody exhaust manifolds of 1966 were stinkers. It's my opinion that when Ford finally made "satisfactory" unibody exhaust manifolds for the 428 in 1968-1/2, they should have buried the 390 unibody exhaust manifolds and gone forward with only the redesigned manifold.
In 1966-67 there was one large-runner head still available in any FE engine. It was called the C6AE-R, and is pretty much a small-valved CJ head with anti-reversion lips, whatever-the-hell they are. There was no way to know whether your '66'-'67 motor would get the C6AE-R because Ford did not seem to care which motor got them. It seems like maybe 1/3 of all FEs got the C6AE-Rs those two years, with the remainder of engines getting the emissions design C6AE-J, C6AE-U, or C7AE-A.
Shoe. |
| | | RE: Stock heads are better than the CJ heads. -- Randall Horn, 07/10/2001
Shoe,
The one thing that I've read (at least sometime somewhere) is that the CJ heads had the intake ports located slightly higher or something like that in the head. This gave the air a straighter shot at the valve and let them breath better. Thats why the CJ's will outflow the older heads even though the ports may be the same size.I may be wrong in this, so please enlighten me some more.
Randall |
| | | | Casting variances. -- Dave Shoe, 07/10/2001
I suspect I may know what the "angle" factor is that these people are talking about. I believe the persons making the claim may be observing core shift, as I can see how the positioning could vary notably, based on the cut of the head.
All I can say is they look identical to me. Also, I don't believe Ford put any kinda oddball engineering effort into making the 428CJ head runners flow. They simply used castings that were sitting on the shelf (remember - CJ heads are cast to fit normal FE valves and gotta be dressed out to fit CJ sized valves) and happened to pick only the good stuff this time.
Shoe.
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| | | RE: Stock heads are better than the CJ heads.SHOE -- Robert, 07/10/2001
If the CJ head gets a MR intake then what port is on the SIDEWINDER INTAKE which is significantly larger then the CJ head intake casting |
| | | | I haven't looked lately. -- Dave Shoe, 07/10/2001
I've learned a bunch more about the Sidewinder in recent months, but haven't compared the port sizes between the Sidewinder, PI, or CJ intake.
It'd be interesting to learn the details of how the port sizes compare between these intakes. I'm not talking runner sizes right now - just the port face which mates to the head. I wonder if they are really are designed to perfectly match to the MR head.
I don't quite understand the popularity of the Sidewinder intake. It apparently flowed really well, but it was designed for counter-clockwise circle track racing to keep fuel flow balanced between the left and right cylinder banks of the engine when pulling heavy g-forces.
How did it become such a popular (or commonly sold) street intake? I guess it must just work well. I've never had one, so I wouldn't know.
Shoe. |
| | | | | RE: I haven't looked lately. -- Robert, 07/13/2001
The void area of the sidewinder is very large resuolting in exceptional top end for big breathing on top end |
| | RE: 1964 390 questions -- Eric, 07/12/2001
I've been throwing around the same questions because I've recently acquired a 65 390 to drop into my 66 Fairlane. So, if the port design doesn't make as much difference as the intake/exhaust design, I've had the performer rpm on a chevy 350 in a 51 Merc (Blasphemy I know, but I didn't put it in, I bought it whole) and it really ran great with A holley 600 vaccuum seccondary. Would the same Intake/carb be sufficient for the 390 or would I have to go to a bigger carb? Also, the Motor came out of a full size merc , so do the stock manifolds breathe well enough, will they fit into the fairlaine without too much trouble (I'm doing a custom dual exhoust anyway) or should I not screw around and just throw a set of headers into it since it's out anyway? Also, any cam preferences? Thanks for the help. Eric |
| Heavy Iron -- Orin, 07/06/2001
I found this guy on the net several months ago. He has some MAJOR heavy iron in his barn, including a '67 R-code Fairlane and a '70 BOSS 429.
http://www.sd455.com/index.htm |
| intake pieces needed -- John, 07/06/2001
I need and oil fill tube and tall heater hose fitting for my medium riser intake. Does anyone make these? Does anyone have one they would like to sell? |
| Motorcraft carb ID? -- Earl Wood, 07/05/2001
I have a Holley carb on an FE engine I purchased. The Motorcraft # is D0PF-U. can anone identify? Please e-mail me if you can. |
| | 1970 service replacement for earlier carbs. [n/m] -- Mr F, 07/05/2001
n/m |
| need info on a 76' 360 -- David Hill 2, 07/03/2001
i have a 76' 360 out of a 1/2 ton pick-up,and i was wandering if you could tell where i could get some info on it.like compression,horse power and so on it came with a 2bbl carb. any help would be app. one more thing how hard do you think it would be to put in an 88'ford ranger. |
| | RE: need info on a 76' 360 -- Dave Shoe, 07/03/2001
Ford stopped listing horsepower for the FE truck engines around 1972, and compression was no longer listed about 1973 or so.
The 360 is always a couple tenths lower in compression than the 390 truck, and 390 truck engines started out around 8.5:1 (foggy memory) (360 around 7.8:1?) in 1968 and bumped their way down in compression as the years passed. I suspect the 360 ended up around 7.4:1 in 1973-76 and the 390 ended up around 7.8:1 the same time. The cam never changed on the 360/390 truck engines their entire run from 1968-76.
I posted some stuff on this in an FE forum maybe a half year back when I first learned the details, but can't remember this stuff very well and can't quite remember where I posted it. If I remember where they are, I'll post a link.
Shoe. |
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