It's been a while, been busy with family, work and life in general. Aside from a couple of vacuum lines, looming up the fuse block and installing the a/c dryer, the engine is done.The Mountaineer engine bay harness fit well with just adding the 3 wires for the PVH and an extra set of marker lights.
The undercarriage came out well, this is an older picture, prior to exhaust...
Still working through the dash and cab harnesses. These are not nearly as compatible as I expected. For starters, the door power in the Ranger splits out of a relay behind the dash and sends off to the doors from there. In the SUV, it leaves the drivers side dash and hits a relay box all the way in the left rear quarter panel, then comes back to each door.
So. Many. Wires...
So the door lock relay has to be wired into the dash, and all the passenger door wiring has to be rerouted. The drivers door connector in the SUV is huge, so some wires will need to be pulled from the Ranger.
Have to add in the PVH wires from the engine bay to the BCM.
It's been noted that I should have let the Ranger wiring alone and move on. That wasn't my plan or ultimate goal. The challenge was to get as much of the SUV amenities to function in the Ranger. Using the Mountaineer harness seemed to be the best way to do so.
Anyway, the overhead console and lighted visors went in well. There are several write ups out there on this. Since I'm using 90% of the Mountaineer wiring, all I really needed to do was mount the physical pieces, then plug and play from there.
The interior is coming along. Got the seats to the shop for a face lift (ahem... $$$!!!, cough.) and picked them up the other day. The seat wiring had to be shortened up. As with the door power, they were routed all the way to the rear left quarter panel.
That's the old, bare Mountaineer dash set in place just so I could align the center console.
Found out the Ranger never had external air bag sensors. It was an interesting chore getting the front and side sensors in place. Had to custom build some brackets to house the side impact sensors in the b pillars. The fronts just needed some holes drilled, but the bumper had to come off to do so.
Again, probably more work than it's worth, but that's all part of the challenge. If I was going to wheel this truck, I definitely would have skipped this.
I posted some questions at the beginning of this thread that never recieved any answers. I can now share some of my findings -
There are no firewall or heater box clearance issues whatsoever, at least using a 99 donor for a 99 recipient. And this truck does NOT have a body lift.
The 5.0 oil pan clears everything without issue.
All air conditioning hoses from the 5.0 fit spot on, and there are aftermarket hoses readily available. A note here, there is a sensor on the manifold that bolts to the compressor on the Ranger hose. This sensor is up next to the battery, just behind the radiator on the SUV hose. If using the Ranger harness, I assume this section of wiring would need to be extended.
The air intake hose and box fit the Ranger. The boxes are essentially the same, but the intake section of the SUV is slightly larger. The mounting plate of the two are different. The SUV plate accommodates a relay box, the Ranger does not. The SUV plate can be used, but needs to be slid back a bit to angle up on the fender well. Drill a couple of holes and fill them with nut rivets.
All radiator and heater hoses for the 5.0 fit fine. The 5.0 radiator is twice as thick as the Rangers, but fits like it was made to. The a/c condenser is completely different between the two vehicles. The SUV uses plastic brackets that mount the a/c condenser to the radiator. The Ranger condenser bolts to a bracket, mounted to the core support. This bracket can be removed and the plastic pieces from the SUV can be used in place of the Rangers. I'm not sure if the Ranger condenser would line up with the SUV a/c hoses.
Since I am going from manual to auto trans, I added in the tranny cooler. Even though the truck was a manual, the mounting holes were there for the stock cooler. However, the radiator air dam for a manual equipped truck is not formed for the cooler. Instead of cutting the dam, I just sourced one up from Pull N Pay for next to nothing.
The 4r70w transmission lines fit perfectly.
The battery tray... This was a chore, anything but bolt on. The Ranger tray was a bear to get out of there (I despise spot weld cutters). The SUV tray took some creative fabricating to get it installed. All in all, I'm glad I took the time to do this. Unfortunately, I don't have any great pics of this. It can barely be seen in the above picture of the engine bay.
The Magnaflow catalytic converter sets fit well, with some effort. Since they were welded together as sets (left two and right two), it took some finesse and the transmission crossmember had to be removed. But they fit, and it's now 50 state emissions legal.
The brake booster... not sure if the '5.0 specific' booster was neccessary or not, but it found its way into the Ranger.
Hoping to at least get it started this week, not sure I'll have it all buttoned up though. If not, I won't get back to it until November.