My personal opinion is that forced induction should happen after at least a basic level of NA tuning. Your engine will thank you in return.
That $2K package is probably worth less than 40 hp at the wheels.I completely agree. Ford's modular design leaves a lot to be desired until later in it's life, however the aftermarket has livened things up a bit. A good NA build-up wouldn't cost too much money, that is if you are looking to do it on the cheap. Jegs and Summit both have dedicated sections to the old 5.0L and the current 4.6L engines, and you are bound to find what you are looking for. As with most American V8s of the era, it is all about getting fresh-air in and the exhaust out, so IMO, the best things you can do are going to be what I mentioned before. In case we forgot:
- New air-intake (less than $400 in most cases, check Ford Racing)
- New Throttle body (should be less than $500-800, depends)
- Power Programmer (usually around $400)
- Header-to-muffler exhaust kit (I'm assuming the Flowmaster 40s didn't include the whole system as the previous owner should have done, usually a bit more than $500 for the whole kit)
That should be good for a little more than $2000, and should get you somewhere around an extra 60-80 or so BHP (I haven't kept up on Ford figures in a while...), as I would be looking to get the car as close as possible to 300 crank BHP, that is if you are looking for mods.
Fellows, we're talking about John Bergin here... with the purchase of said car, he's actually too broke to a) insure it, and b) put gas in it.
So don't bother trying to come up with ways to make it faster... for now.![]()
Fellows, we're talking about John Bergin here... with the purchase of said car, he's actually too broke to a) insure it, and b) put gas in it.
- New air-intake (less than $400 in most cases, check Ford Racing)
- New Throttle body (should be less than $500-800, depends)
- Power Programmer (usually around $400)
- Header-to-muffler exhaust kit (I'm assuming the Flowmaster 40s didn't include the whole system as the previous owner should have done, usually a bit more than $500 for the whole kit)
That should be good for a little more than $2000, and should get you somewhere around an extra 60-80 or so BHP (I haven't kept up on Ford figures in a while...), as I would be looking to get the car as close as possible to 300 crank BHP, that is if you are looking for mods.
That $2K package is probably worth less than 40 hp at the wheels.
All the intake/exhaust tuning you can imagine will do nothing for the awful 2v heads. A power programmer is worth 15-20 hp tops.
Let alone register it. We should start a pool on when he actually gets the car on the road. I come home for Spring Break on March 9 - $10 says he's not driving it by then.
Looks like it.... what if it never existed?![]()
Exactly.You've been bragging and boasting about this Mustang V8 monster of yours to me for weeks now....and you don't even have insurance on it!?
I might only have four feisty pistons, but at least I can drive my car legally.
Think: RWD and snow. You can imagine what happened.![]()