© Copyright 1995 thru 2008 - The Mustang Works™. All Rights Reserved.
MustangWorks.com is designed and hosted by Aero3 Media.
MustangWorks.com is designed and hosted by Aero3 Media.
05-30-2005, 09:12 AM | #1 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Mar 2000
Location: Berwick,Pa
Posts: 127
|
block type question
did ford use a roller 302 block as used in the mustang in anything else during the late 80's (truck, tbird, cougar, lincoln, crown vic)? reason i'm asking is that a gentleman offered to sell me a 1988 302 out of an F150, and i was wondering if it was a roller block or not.
thanks |
05-30-2005, 10:26 AM | #2 |
I'd rather be basketweaving
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Indianapolis
Posts: 2,551
|
Re: block type question
nope its not. I don't think they used the rollers until 93 or 94 in the trucks.
It could still be a good motor if he's got it for a good deal. Hydraulic rollers are cool, but they're really nothing that special. You can easily make the same or more power with a standard flat tappet.
__________________
NMRA O/C 9516 NA pumpgas stickshift 347 10.65@125.6, 6.73@100, 1.41 60ft |
05-30-2005, 05:50 PM | #3 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Sep 1998
Location: Oviedo, FL
Posts: 992
|
Re: block type question
The Lincoln LSC had a roller block.
Also, not to start a war....but you can make more streetable power with a roller motor. The opening and closing events are much steeper and move the valves faster. The NASCAR guys wish they could run a roller motor.
__________________
"Support our Troops" Dave 1968 Cougar 2004 Thunderbird 2007 F150 Harley-Davidson, SuperCrew 1986 LTD 1997 Ranger 1992 Honda Civic |
05-30-2005, 09:40 PM | #4 |
I'd rather be basketweaving
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Indianapolis
Posts: 2,551
|
Re: block type question
roller and hydraulic roller are completely different worlds. I'd love to see a hydraulic roller in a NASCAR engine
The faster you accelerate the valvetrain (ramp rate), the more advantage a solid lifter has over a hydraulic, end of story. Up to a point, there's not much difference. For a street application, either will work fine, which is why the engine mentioned above will work just as nicely as a roller block would.
__________________
NMRA O/C 9516 NA pumpgas stickshift 347 10.65@125.6, 6.73@100, 1.41 60ft |
05-31-2005, 05:59 PM | #5 | |
Domestic Rice really sucks!
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: KY
Posts: 973
|
Re: block type question
Quote:
__________________
The sig says it all. |
|
05-31-2005, 11:42 PM | #6 |
Moderator
Join Date: Sep 1998
Location: Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA
Posts: 1,001
|
Re: block type question
Mine too....and yes, the idle quality is great once you're done running it @ WOT over 6000 rpm for a while. NOT! Heheheh. Okay, I blame my bad rod bearings.
I believe SOLID rollers were what was being eluded to. Hydraulics just couldn't take the abuse....no, scratch that. The valvetrain couldn't take it, and your spring pressure would have to be even MORE ungodly than NASCAR engines already run at. I'd love to see the track speeds in NEXTEL cup racing if they were allowed to use solid rollers, btw. They need to ditch restrictor plates, flat lifters....ugh, okay, sorry, I didn't mean to try to hijack the thread, much less discuss NA$CAR. FWIW, the real prize to find is a roller-ready 351W, produced for a very short duration for the early lightnings (1995-1996 if I'm not mistaken). Thar be the pot o' gold!
__________________
Capri306, Moderator The Mustang Works Online 1979 Mercury Capri 1987 5.0L Mustang LX Notchback 1993 5.8L Eddie Bauer Bronco |
06-02-2005, 09:57 PM | #7 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Mar 1999
Location: Ventura, California
Posts: 8,981
|
Re: block type question
The F150 and Mustang 5.0L blocks were identical starting in 1988. They installed flat tappet cams in the trucks until 1992, but the block is exactly the same as the Mustang block. You may have to tap the holes in the lifter valley for the spider, but otherwise it's a simple conversion.
__________________
Webmaster: Rice Haters Club Jim Porter Racing Peckerwoods Pit Stop Support Your Local
RED & WHITE! |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Big Block swap | Sage427 | Modular Madness | 2 | 09-29-2004 08:49 PM |
Need help deciding on an engine block!! | 93 Cobra needs input | Windsor Power | 6 | 10-23-2002 05:29 PM |
What makes a Small block a Small block and a Big Block a big block? | gtsr515 | Windsor Power | 13 | 05-20-2002 10:25 PM |
86 block / E7 head question | 302man | Windsor Power | 5 | 11-13-2001 08:27 PM |
Block Question | rj_stang | Windsor Power | 1 | 02-07-2001 02:08 AM |