Well I'm certainly no engineer ( I hate math) and my truck is far from perfect but I will tell you I moved my engine/trans forward 2" and have noticed no adverse reactions. I don't have a big block... Nor was I worried about a perfect COG or anything like that. I wanted things to fit. Having done this my valve covers have plenty of room, my distributor cap seems miles away from the firewall compared to stock and I may even be able to pull the distributor with the motor in the truck now
My angles are pretty solid too and have no driveline vibes to report of.
Another COG argument is that you have hundreds of pounds of tube in the back for the cage/sliders. I'm sure you'll have seats, passengers, tools, a full (at first) 40 gallon gas tank and a big a$$ bumper in the rear too. The weight of sliding the motor 2" forward should be more than offset than all of that I would think. Plus you'd have the added space for the valve covers/dizzy with a metric $hit ton less work to do.
Just my 0.02, but again I'm no expert.
My angles are pretty solid too and have no driveline vibes to report of. Another COG argument is that you have hundreds of pounds of tube in the back for the cage/sliders. I'm sure you'll have seats, passengers, tools, a full (at first) 40 gallon gas tank and a big a$$ bumper in the rear too. The weight of sliding the motor 2" forward should be more than offset than all of that I would think. Plus you'd have the added space for the valve covers/dizzy with a metric $hit ton less work to do.
Just my 0.02, but again I'm no expert.
Getting the pinion up higher is just as good as lowering the suspension down, but again it's a huge and costly change.






