- Joined
- Apr 7, 2009
- Messages
- 204
- Points
- 3,101
- City
- Dubuque, Iowa
- Vehicle Year
- 2000
2016
- Transmission
- Manual
The steering is done, the double-D showed up in the mail on Friday.
I should be excited, but I have run into a rather large set back...
I am working on mounting the radiator. The radiator dictates the location of the intercooler, and to a lesser extent, the airbox. I have the radiator mount as far forward and high (want to get the intercooler under it) as I can. It won't go any farther without completely cutting up my brand new core support that I just installed. I got the lower mount temporarily installed and though I would see how much clearance I have around my cooling fan, and the answer was none. There isn't any clearance around my cooling fan. I don't even have enough room for cold side tube to run up to the throttle body without the cooling fan installed.
It turns out that the engine bay for a late model F150 is a LOT bigger than a 2000 ford ranger. Who would have guessed.
This is forcing me into modifying and fabricating all the plumping for this engine in addition to finding how to add a cooling fan or two. I didn't think it would be this hard to do the swap. But it's been one major set back after another. Every time I freak out, wonder if I have just thrown all this money away for nothing, sleep on it, and come up with a solution, but I don't think I would recommend this swap in a ranger. Not if you aren't willing to completely remake the front end.
I still need to sleep on this one, so I am not calling it a BUST yet. But one of these times, I wish something would work like I had planned.
I should be excited, but I have run into a rather large set back...
I am working on mounting the radiator. The radiator dictates the location of the intercooler, and to a lesser extent, the airbox. I have the radiator mount as far forward and high (want to get the intercooler under it) as I can. It won't go any farther without completely cutting up my brand new core support that I just installed. I got the lower mount temporarily installed and though I would see how much clearance I have around my cooling fan, and the answer was none. There isn't any clearance around my cooling fan. I don't even have enough room for cold side tube to run up to the throttle body without the cooling fan installed.
It turns out that the engine bay for a late model F150 is a LOT bigger than a 2000 ford ranger. Who would have guessed.

This is forcing me into modifying and fabricating all the plumping for this engine in addition to finding how to add a cooling fan or two. I didn't think it would be this hard to do the swap. But it's been one major set back after another. Every time I freak out, wonder if I have just thrown all this money away for nothing, sleep on it, and come up with a solution, but I don't think I would recommend this swap in a ranger. Not if you aren't willing to completely remake the front end.
I still need to sleep on this one, so I am not calling it a BUST yet. But one of these times, I wish something would work like I had planned.
.
.
. There is a plastic coolant manifold on the back of the engine (not what ford calls it). It routes coolant between the two heads, the thermostat housing at the front of the engine and the heater core. The attachment point for the heater hose sticks out a funny angle without much support. When I bought the engine, the heater hose port was broken off. So I spent my $60 bucks and bought a new one from ford. Well at one point when I was installing the engine into the truck, the transmission slipped off the jack and the engine hit the firewall. I thought "oh ?, did I break that port?" A quick visual inspection said no, it was fine. Well, I was wrong, working on the coolant hoses, I put a hose on the port and noticed a lot of movement. I had cracked the plastic and now it's junk. The proper thing would be to just buy a new one and replace it... Again. But I am still in the denial phase.