Author Topic: Mopar swap  (Read 12426 times)

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Offline Steve Wood

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Mopar swap
« on: September 10 2020, 10:45:31 PM »
my son brought his '72 Plymouth Satellite wagon up the week end that started all the quarantine rigmarole here back in March.  We pulled the 150 hp 318/transmission out of it.  He made a trip up a couple of months ago and we installed time serts into all the exhaust manifolds on the 440 that were either stripped, or semi stripped as they go thru into the water jacked. That was a bit of a pain in the neck but we gotta her dun as they say.  We also installed new valve springs and seals.  I have a 440 that has been sitting in the shop for years since I pulled it out of the Challenger and dropped the 526 in it.

I hope the damn thing is still okay.  It does not seem to be rusted up.  I am not sure about the Torqueflite 727 that goes on the back of it but, again, it was working when it came out.

He came up again last week end and we dropped engine and tranny in, rebuilt the steering coupler and reconnected the steering box that I got resealed in hopes of fixing a power steering leak.

Now, I have to get under the car and pray that all the bits and pieces that I bought will allow me to figure out how to get a column shifter to work with a 727 as it was not an option.

Then I will rewire it using a GM HEI ignition module and a Crane/FAST E type coil.  I will power the module directly from the battery via a relay that is triggered by the ignition switch wires that originally went to a cursed ballast resistor.  The Mopar box is in the trash.

He bought a serpentine two belt system that hopefully he can figure out how to install LOL   It cost the same as trying to find all the correct factory pulleys in the correct combination.  The brackets and stuff that came off the 440 moved over to the 526 so I had nothing there.

The headers were not too bad of a pain.  The driver's side was tedious because it had to pushed up into place but not bolted down until the starter (driver's side) was then inserted and bolted down and then the headers got installed and the engine finished lowering into place.

Once I get the column shift working (hopefully), then I will install a cable set up for the TV valve that will work with a Holley.

It was a hot week end but I mainly handed him wrenches, told him what he was doing wrong, warned him about his attitude, and/or laid under the car and steered the tail shaft.

I need to measure the driveshaft and get a new one made that will probably be about 5" shorter as best I can figure from looking at specs, but I would not yet bet on it until it gets measured.

Steve Wood

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A lot of broken parts does not make you a racer; it makes you a slow learner.

Offline Shimy87

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Re: Mopar swap
« Reply #1 on: September 11 2020, 10:23:11 AM »
I love the "warned him about his attitude" line🤣🤣🤣  good times!!
87 GN, K&N cold air, gutted cat, TT 5.7 chip, AFPR, 340 Walbro w/ hotwire, 60 LBS injectors, 981 valve springs, 206/206 Cam, RJC Powerplate, LS1 MAF & translator, Vacuum brakes, Hellwig rear sway bar, Energy suspension poly bushings, Razors Alky, Pypes exhaust, 5931 turbo, CK9.5 converter

Offline Steve Wood

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Re: Mopar swap
« Reply #2 on: September 11 2020, 10:27:18 AM »
I'm getting mellow in my old age :030:.
Steve Wood

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A lot of broken parts does not make you a racer; it makes you a slow learner.

Offline daveismissing

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Re: Mopar swap
« Reply #3 on: September 11 2020, 10:23:28 PM »
Time with your son is always great, sarcastic repartee not withstanding :)
-Drain plug by Earl Brown, custom oil pan by Rich's Auto

Offline Scoobum

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Re: Mopar swap
« Reply #4 on: September 12 2020, 08:33:28 AM »
Very cool! A few pics of the exterior/interior would be great.
« Last Edit: September 12 2020, 09:08:36 AM by Scoobum »
Hard work pays off, dreams come true. Bad times don't last, but BAD GUYS do!

RIP Scott Hall AKA Razor Ramon

Offline Steve Wood

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Re: Mopar swap
« Reply #5 on: September 12 2020, 11:08:54 AM »
Brad, my son marches to his own drummer LOL  He has a Miata, a Lexus LS430, a couple of 50cc Honda scooters, a Buick T-Type which has been sitting in my shop for about 15 years, a Honda van, and the Wagon which he calls the Green Mile, or Bruce Banner/Hulk.

The wagon he saw online  https://barnfinds.com/outerspacious-1972-plymouth-satellite-wagon/
It had belonged to a professor at Washington State University until some guy down in Texas bought it in 1972.  He never transferred it into his name so my son is the official second owner.  The guy in Texas had it about four months and put it on Ebay.  My son bought it for 3500 in January of 2018.

It appears to be an honest 72,000 miles on it as best as I can tell altho it's hard to tell on a 50 year old car because bushings, and so on, rot in that time.  The car ran good but with 150 hp, it did not merge easily onto freeways with people going 80 mph.  Rode good altho very, very soft.  It's definitely gonna take some work on bringing the suspension up to snuff.

The driver's fender has a couple of small rust holes in it and the car has some surface rust in various spots.  The problem is that it is a wagon and altho it is the same body line as Chargers, Road Runners, and so on, the sheet metal is more in line with 4-doors and is not available new like the two doors.  No headliners and interior either.

He put wheels and tires on it, had seat covers and a headliner made, put a booster on the brakes, new alternator, and a starter while he was driving it around Houston.  He drove it out here and told me it vibrated at times and jumped out of gear at times.  I looked at it and realized the both engine mounts and the tranny mount were totally gone.  The engine and tranny were sitting at an angle and not tied down at all.  Amazing how all the problems went away after we got it back in place on new mounts.  :rock:

I had the 440 and transmission out of the Challenger sitting on the floor  here and we decided that was what the doctor prescribed.  That was a dumb mistake because accessories to make the swap cost more than it would have cost to build a strong small block but not all decisions in the car business are wise ones.

On the way out here back in March, it died on him in traffic in Austin.  I figured it was the fuel pump, but, no, it was the ignition module.  It made like a Buick and melted.  I told him to get a wrecker and get it off the road and I would come get him.  A cop came along and told him he could not leave it there while waiting for a wrecker.  The cop was driving a F150 and pulled up behind him and gave him a push.  Put a shallow dent in the tail gate which was in perfect condition before that.  He's still pissed about that and I don't blame him.

Anyway, we got it here and pulled the 318 out.

Below are some pics.  One is a day when he drove it to work and it is sitting in the parking garage.  Looks just like the one that Mrs. Brady drove on the Brady Bunch tv show.

Another picture of the seat covers that he had made for it.  It does not have the third seat option but he had the front and second seat done as well as a head liner.

There is a picture of all the boxes of parts we accumulated getting ready.  It had factory air but was out of freon.  We bought a modern compressor but he will have to save some money for a Vintage Air unit to go under the dash.

As I mentioned, I am going to wire a GM HEI ignition system.  That's the only way to fly on Fords and Mopars if you want reliability-or spend big bucks on a MSD system which I suspect use a HEI module in the distributor.

Steve Wood

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A lot of broken parts does not make you a racer; it makes you a slow learner.

Offline Grumpy

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Re: Mopar swap
« Reply #6 on: September 12 2020, 11:25:29 AM »
Looking good. Hey he didn't walk away from it. Cool driver once it's done. My get up an go has got up an left.  :cheers:

Offline Steve Wood

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Re: Mopar swap
« Reply #7 on: September 12 2020, 11:32:20 AM »
I cannot find mine, either, Dan!  I am better at directing than doing.  I did swap out the suspension in my Miata last fall.  My son drove it to Houston this spring when he brought the wagon out here.  He got an alignment done on it and had ceramic tint installed.  He still has it down there. I miss driving it.  I'm afraid I may get too old to crawl in and out of it before I get it back.
Steve Wood

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A lot of broken parts does not make you a racer; it makes you a slow learner.

Offline Scoobum

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Re: Mopar swap
« Reply #8 on: September 12 2020, 12:59:52 PM »
Thanks for the pics Steve. I love wagons. Keep us updated...we love pics!
Hard work pays off, dreams come true. Bad times don't last, but BAD GUYS do!

RIP Scott Hall AKA Razor Ramon

Offline Shimy87

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Re: Mopar swap
« Reply #9 on: September 12 2020, 06:11:17 PM »
Nice ride!
87 GN, K&N cold air, gutted cat, TT 5.7 chip, AFPR, 340 Walbro w/ hotwire, 60 LBS injectors, 981 valve springs, 206/206 Cam, RJC Powerplate, LS1 MAF & translator, Vacuum brakes, Hellwig rear sway bar, Energy suspension poly bushings, Razors Alky, Pypes exhaust, 5931 turbo, CK9.5 converter

Offline wmsonta

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Re: Mopar swap
« Reply #10 on: September 13 2020, 02:44:40 PM »

As I mentioned, I am going to wire a GM HEI ignition system. 

If you get as deep into distributors as I, I would advise you to at least look into the MSD E Street dist. The days of Sun dist machines and simple re curves are long over. If you are talking the large coil in cap HEI, they are hard and labor intensive to properly curve. Even with nearly 50 years experience, GM HEI is a number of compromises.

I advised and recently helped with the second one. A 454 ton trk w/dump bed. The owner expects to gain half the cost from mileage increase over OEM.

They are expensive. Single coil, no box, no additional wiring. A custom curve in 2 minutes. I consider these to be the best answer at any cost from ton trks to 600 hp/7000rpm STREET.
looking is free.

Offline earlbrown

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Re: Mopar swap
« Reply #11 on: September 13 2020, 10:20:43 PM »
I read about retrofitting GM HEI modules on slatsix.org years ago.   Talk about easy.  4 wires, and two of them are power.


  If you've got another 440 laying around I found this a few minutes ago while browsing the 'non street legal' section of eBay....

https://rover.ebay.com/rover/1/711-53200-19255-0/1?mpre=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ebay.com%2Fitm%2F154083788803&campid=5338554057&toolid=10001&customid=
'87 GN - 4.2L SFI Turbocharged innercooled V6 - Chrome valve covers - supra pump - 14" K&N - 52mm throttlebody - rocker shaft supports -  1/2 intake spacer - TB coolant bypass - 3" ATR exhaust tip - Alum intake pipe - NOS timing cover - chip - relocated charcoal canister - CR42's - stock

Offline Steve Wood

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Re: Mopar swap
« Reply #12 on: September 13 2020, 11:09:49 PM »
If I had another 440, I would love that Henry J!

Before I moved out here, I had a couple of friends that built a Falcon for vintage racing.  It would not pull the rpm we expected down the straights.

We pulled the ferd ignition module and coil and went to an HEI and the same coil I am using on this one.  Picked up 800 rpm.

I think there are quite a few used on Fords but the slant six is the first place I read about it.  When I bought the Challenger that this 440 came out of, it was hard to start and got worse when it got hot.  I tried a different box and it made no difference.  I think put the HEI module and Crane E coil on it and it started almost instantly every time.

I suspect the fact that I powered it directly off the alternator and it was getting almost two volts more than it did thru the factory wiring was an important factor.

I am doing the same thing on this wagon with the same motor.  I had pulled it out and replaced it with a 526 stroker.  If it was not so damn much work, I would pull the 526 out and put it in the wagon but I hate the struggle.

He wants a cruiser anyway, and the 440 was plenty strong
Steve Wood

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A lot of broken parts does not make you a racer; it makes you a slow learner.

Offline earlbrown

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Re: Mopar swap
« Reply #13 on: September 15 2020, 01:08:02 AM »
'87 GN - 4.2L SFI Turbocharged innercooled V6 - Chrome valve covers - supra pump - 14" K&N - 52mm throttlebody - rocker shaft supports -  1/2 intake spacer - TB coolant bypass - 3" ATR exhaust tip - Alum intake pipe - NOS timing cover - chip - relocated charcoal canister - CR42's - stock

Offline nocooler

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Re: Mopar swap
« Reply #14 on: September 15 2020, 02:49:39 AM »
Looks good Steve!
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