Talked to my brother in law. First gen and second gen fan drives and clutches are the same.
Scott's mounts from Tennessee diesel work with the gm radiator and second gen fan if I'm not mistaken. Call to confirm.
I'm going for common parts in my swap. I'm notching the frame.
Separated the motor and trans, attempted to put it on my stand. Started bending the plate on the back of the stand, so I'm going to buy a new 1 ton stand this week. I'm going to Texas tomorrow to look at an NV4500 that has a damaged idler gear for 500, so hopefully I bring that home.
The million dollar question. What mounts are you swap guys running and are you able to use a mechanical fan? I've been searching all kinds of forums, but the Photobucket curse keeps getting me. I'm going to use the GM radiator as the dodge has a cracked tank. I'm reading mixed reviews on running a mechanical fan without getting into the firewall to push the engine far enough back. I'm also seeing a first gen fan hub is shorter and may allow clearance. Can anyone verify?
AC compressor clearance. The stock compressor works, and I'm having a hard time swallowing a 600 dollar high mount bracket and a new compressor over just notching the frame. What have you guys done, and why? I've considered cutting the frame, bending it up, and welding a piece in at each cut to close the gap. I had seen one where a guy had just heated and bent the frame away from the compressor as well, but I'm not too sure about heating and bending that much of the frame.
The small block radiator cools well. My 94 12 valve during summer time you could watch the temp gauge and see the thermostat open and close. It's a cool running engine.
The small radiator and the upper mounts that bolt to the inside of the core support as opposed to the top are ideal for fitment and swapping. For what reason I forget but Scott told me that it's the preferred radiator if staying gm.
I did one a few years ago for a guy that had a cracked "53" block. We took a "new" junkyard engine and just ran a dingle ball hone through it and reringed it and all new bearings and gaskets.
Yeah I was working at a truck shop at the time and did it for a paying customer that wanted to go cheaper than a full on $10,000 rebuild. I got good results honing and just did new rings and a complete reseal and new bearings. I see no reason for you to mess with machine work if the engine ran good and just has some less than perfect cross hatch in the cylinders. As far as I know the one I did is still out there pulling a heavy ass enclosed trailer every day.I've been having trouble locating someone that's actually done it outside of a few pictures. I'm assuming it turned out well?
I'm not even reringing my 325k motor. Damn thing specs great. I'll rebuild it at 500 of it needs it or not.