|
|
Original Message
|
old style motormounts used the expansion tank. |
By Dave Shoe - 03/16/2004 6:51:28 PM; IP 216.243.176.34 |
The old FE motormounts which required only 2 bolts forced the engine to sit up a little higher in the engine bay.
In 1965 the full-sized Ford was completely redesigned, and one of the changes was an all new style motor mount that was flat and allowed the engine to sit lower in the engine bay than the old mount, thus lowering the hood near the windshield and flattening it.
This flatter motor mount required an extra bolt to fasten to the block, since it wasn't as rigid as the earlier design. This change forced the 1965 FE block casting to grow some extra motor mount bosses, and all 1965-later FE/FT blocks have four motor mount holes machined into each side, instead of two.
The T-Bird was not redesigned until 1967, so it retained the old 2-bolt motor mount for a couple years, as well as the sloping hood styling, and so it kept the expansion tank, too.
The Fairlane never used the 2-bolt FE motor mount, so it never got the expansion tank.
Note a related change involved the thermostat diameter. The expansion tank used a larger diameter thermostat and T-stat housing to offer a little extra support for all the hanging weight. When the expansion tank disappeared, the thermostat soon shrank, reducing the size of the thermostat hole cast into the manifold. The bolts were the same, but the small thermostat falls completely inside a large-hole intake, and the large T-stat just plain don't fit the small hole intake.
To make matters worse, either large or small hole intakes can be found randomly on some cars without expansion tanks, so it's sometimes a crapshoot which size of T-stat you need. You either have to calibrate your eye to recognize which type of thermostat housing you have, or you have to buy both sizes and return the one you don't need.
The T-stat issue is a mid-60s era thing only, but is nice to know, since it can be a temporary nuisance if you buy a used intake and don't have both types of t-stat housings on hand to complete the assembly. Fortunately, both types of housings remain cheap and easy to get ahold of.
JMO, Shoe. |
|
This thread, so far...
|
|
Post A Response
|
|
|
|