Im sick of argueing about which is better. Allan, you just dont like the 2.9, because youve had bad experince with them. The 4.0L is a turd, givin its displacement and the power it makes for its displacment. If it was as "good" as the 2.9L it would be making something like 200hp, so inreality, even the SOHC 4.0L isnt all that great compared to the 2.9.
If the 4.0 was tuned as good as the 2.9L it should be making exactly 193HP and 254FTLBS of Torque.
And we all know it makes no where near that.
later,
Dustin
Dustin, if you are sick of arguing stop arguing
I'm DISCUSSING against your arguements.
I concede some of your points and you disrespect mine with hyperbole.
You sir are the one doing the arguing and you can keep doing it or not
as it amuses you, I will refute factual errors until hell freezes over if
necissary.
No onto the facts:
Ford specifically didn't want the 4.0 to be a peaky engine Frankly the power from a 2.9 isn't as useful as it could be because the engine simply has to rev too much. and optimizing it for lower rpm reduces the peak numbers, that's life a compromise.
the 2.9 is "adequate" for a 2wd std cab, but for anything else you simply need a larger engine, because only displacement can give you torque.
"Power" isn't the important thing Torque is.
if the 4.0 was making 193hp it wouldn't be making useable torque down at 1500rpm (which it does!) and wouldn't be as useful offroad or towing as it is.
and the 2.9 CANNOT overcome that, it simply doesn't have the displacement to be "torquey".
The issue is that the 2.9 despite the best efforts to run it as one is NOT a "truck" engine and all the wishing and hoping to the contrary isn't going to change that. Additionally the 2.9 because it is stressed so much of the time has reliability issues, not to mention they were kinda built "on the cheap"
I have a great use for a 2.9 engine! I'll but another TVR 280i and swap in an EFI 2.9 (with a scorpio intake) in place of the POS 2.8 engine that my TVR had, I won't have another one in an RBV.
EVERY man who has a good opinion of the 2.9 has likely only had a few and all of those few have been good ones. My PERSONAL experience with 2.9 engines now stands at ELEVEN, of those One was superb, two others were
"So-So" and the rest? pure shit.
I have 370K miles with 2.9 engines in my Ranger supercab alone and another 320K miles between my two bronco2's, so I think I know a bit about them.
Then there are the 2.9's in the vehicles of friends and relatives that I get to fix, because it seems I'm the only one that really understands them...
And my decision to pass on another 2.9 is by no means emotional
I Like the 2.9 in general, when the example you are speaking
of runs "right", but IN REALITY they do that all-to-rarely.
I don't believe that it's any exaggeration to say that for
every "good" 2.9 there are four or five (or possibly six)
that are utter crap.
If Ford had made the 2.9 "better" there'd probably be three times as many Ranger enthusiasts than there are.
Frankly I think the 4.0 is what the 2.9 should have been
in the first place.
you are assuming that I'm emotional about the 2.9, I'm not.
I ran 2.9's because they WERE (for me anyway) CHEAP.
And since my '87 ranger was factory wired for a 2.9 the easiest solution.
I gave up on the 2.9 after killing three of them in 18 months and having no really good gambles on further junkyard replacement engines and having three 4.0 engines on hand...
I won't swap in a junkyard engine unless I have another one on-hand.
and I will immediatly aquire another (I won't drive anything without a "spare")
The real conversion from a 2.9 to a 4.0 took me an actual time
working on conversion specific stuff of about three weeks.
I had my truck mostly together as a 4x4 with the 2.9 when
the "new" 2.9 was determined to be bad when I had to pull it
and start on the 4.0 conversion.
The truck actually took far longer to assemble because of all the
other stuff I did (I also converted to 4x4, created by own body mount hardware and did a 1" body lift completely replaced ALL the wiring and power distribution in the truck...About the only thing I left alone was the FRONT lighting and horn wiring. (everything going to the rear of the truck now runs off of relays)
But for that effort the engine essentially started on the first try.
I say essentially because I had a fuel pump wiring issue that was
caused by a ground lug I didn't screw down that would have
crippled a fresh 2.9 install just as completely....
My install was difficult only because I deliberatly made it so
when I REFUSED to modify the '87 connectors at the drivers
side firewall or dashboard and I INSISTED on switching over to the 1993 power distribution system thereby ELIMINATING virtually all of the fuseable links in the trucks wiring. and to do all that I had to cut up TWO other wiring
harnesses to Create an adapter harness (mostly because I'm
replacing my entire CAB at a later date)
Yeah you can "turd polish" a 2.9 into something it really isn't
but at what price?
You talk about the 2.8 piston swap? Did you pack the short block in cumpled $50 bills for the trip home?
I probably spent less on the complete conversion than anyone doing the 2.8 piston swap does on the machine shop work and gasket sets.
I take offense at your characterizing my thoughts on the 2.9 as disliking it?
I don't actually dislike them, I am just HONEST about the 2.9's (many) flaws
and recognise that a 4.0 is simply a better foundation to build upon.
In reality the mods many suggest for the 2.9 are no easier than switching to a 4.0, the difference is in the nature of the challenges, mechanical/machining that you PAY someone else to do or electrical that you CAN do yourself if you are capable of tying your own shoes...
The very fact that the 2.9 is as powerful as it is for it's size makes the proposed task of "improving" it essentially an exercise in futility for use in a truck.
Remember the old hotrodder's maxim: Cubic Inches? Yes!
the 4.0 simply has 75 more cubic inches to work with, that plus
bigger ports, heads (even the 90-91 4.0 heads) that are FAR
more resistant to cracking than even the vaunted "world product"
or TM90 2.9 head castings. the later '93-94 head casting are probably the most crack resistant of the 4.0 heads, and Hey, the 4.0 has a friction reducing roller cam as well!
and there is SOME aftermarket support for the 4.0 whereas the aftermarket support for the 2.9 is non-exsistant unless you count the availability of headman or pacesetter headers. (JBA having discontinued their 2.9 headers)
Getting rid of the distributor (and the TFI module)
can hardly be a bad thing either...
And no adjustable rocker arms for the misguided backyarder
to screw-up.
Not to mention that the 4.0 finally did away with those
damned V-belts
It seems to me that what everyone wants to do to a 2.9 is CONVERT their 2.9 into a 4.0 and most of what I'm saying is that it is easier (no to mention cheaper) to simply convert TO a 4.0 rather than convert a 2.9 INTO a 4.0
And basically I switched to a 4.0 because trustworthy junkyard
2.9's are getting as rare as finding REAL silver coins in your change...
while finding a good '93-94 (or later) 4.0's is as easy as finding someone
wearing a leather jacket in a biker bar.
and to get back to the original question is the swap worth it? Only the person doing it can decide.
I did it but if I'd had another 2.9 engine around Id've probably stuck with the 2.9 engine for a while atleast... (however long or short the engine lasted) but, now that I've made the switch I won't go back.
Yes, I'm glad I switched.
I wish I'd done it seven years ago when I first aquired my engine swap donor.
Don't fear the wiring, it isn't really as hard as it looks.
AD