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Re: engine rebuilds and more

To: Curt <choffman9@cinci.rr.com>
Subject: Re: engine rebuilds and more
From: Larry Paulick <lpaulick@comcast.net>
Date: Tue, 04 Apr 2006 19:31:36 -0400
Some very good advise from the previous restorers.  Having done a ground 
up, with media blasting the body, and everything rebuild, or new (some 
chrome), I have only one suggestion.

The engine.  The old 260 is good for a purist, but you can buy a 5.0L at 
the junk yard for $400-$500, and it has more cubes, a roller rocker 
system, the internals are clean, not junked up from 40+ years of 
neglect, it will run cooler, and the after market parts are abundant.  
It will outperform a 260 for a fraction of the money for an all out 
rebuild of a 260.

Looks, who knows, as all of the "stuff' transfers.

It worked for me.

Larry

Curt wrote:

> I've done three Tigers now-
> The first I did everything- engine, suspension, etc. Only thing I 
> didn't do was the body work. Took me over three years and a ton of money.
> The second one I had Doug Jennings do the suspension, I did the engine 
> and everything else, and farmed out the body work. took me three years 
> and a ton of money.
> This time I farmed out the engine, had Doug do the suspension, am 
> leaving the body alone, and did everythign else myself. Took a ton of 
> money minus a little, and so far I hope to be done in two years. I am 
> either getting busier or something.
>
> I enjoyed rebuilding the engines and it's not all that hard. But I 
> thought a professional rebuild would be a nice change. I have rebuilt 
> two of the transmissions before and that is pretty easy. This one I am 
> leaving alone. The brakes and such are pretty straighforward as is all 
> the assembly. Just decided to let Doug do the welding and bushing 
> installation on the suspension. I did the assembly.
>
> The previous note about pictures, bags or something for all the bolts, 
> etc is critical. After three years, you forget where those bolts went 
> and how something goes together. I labeled everything and still it 
> could have used more. years of fading has hurt my labeling of bolts / 
> parts too. Plus putting the old greasy parts in a bag with a paper 
> label has caused some problems over time as the grease morphed into 
> the paper making the label unreadable. I label every wire and such too 
> even if it seemed childish and obvious when I first took it apart. I 
> know from hard knocks on previous projects.
>
> The other good thing about taking three years to complete a car. You 
> get three summers of car events to go look at other cars, take 
> pictures, and ask questions to cover up your amnesia.
>
> Curt Hoffman
>
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