Step 11: Upgrading to a 440, Part 1
I've always had 440s in my Roadrunners, and wanted to add one to the Pittsbird as well. At this point, I've got about $2,400 before I reach my $8,000 budget cap. In keeping with my methodology, I wanted to do this in a way that anybody could, and I can't expect everyone to be able to do engine rebuilds or swaps in their garages. This means I need to pay a shop to do the work, and come up with the cheapest way to do it.
I was going to get a an engine and trans that were ready for install, but I came across a smoking deal on Craigslist. The guy was selling a 1972 440 HP block, .030 over, with a 727B transmission, Mallory distributor, Mopar Performance valve covers, mini-starter, and a purple camshaft and lifter kit for $250. The bad news was someone rebuilt it and didn't turn the crankshaft correctly, so the engine needed to be rebuilt. I couldn't pass that deal up, so I went and brought the engine and tranny home.
I posted an ad on craigslist for for the 360 and 727 that were in the car, and started contacting some speed shops to get quotes. I found one local shop that would rebuild the engine and do the swap for $1,300, but all I saw was Fords and Chevies, and I didn't see where they had much Mopar experience. I was contacted by a guy who works at a shop in Jacksonville that does a lot of Mopar work, and he was interested in buying my engine and trans for a project car he was working on, and wanted to know if I would consider trading my engine and trans for a shop credit and having the shop he worked at do the work.
I talked to the owner of the shop, and we worked out a deal. They would give me a $1,300 credit for the 360 and trans, and the cost to rebuild the 440 would be $1,100, plus $600 for the swap, so I would be at $400 out of pocket to get the 440 rebuilt and installed. Combined with the $250 I paid for the core, and another $420 for an alternator, P/S pump brackets, pulleys, and new bolts from eBay; plus sender units and motor mounts from Napa (they are still available new from those guys); and a set of new headers and a rebuilt 850 Thermoquad I bought off craigslist locally, I'm going to be at $1,070 to get the engine rebuilt and installed.
I took the car over to the shop in March 2013, and we'll see how this goes.
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Upgrading to a 440 Part 2
Unlike getting the paint & body done, doing the engine swap has posed some challenges. The first was it turns out my car didn't have a 727, but a 904 trans, which the guy at the shop couldn't use so that deal fell through. I reposted the engine and trans on Craigslist, and quickly (and luckily) got another buyer for it, but they would only pay $1,100, so my costs just went up $200.
Another issue that came up was the shop owner checked the 727B trans out and found that it needed to be rebuilt. Ouch! On the plus side, he does work on engines for guys that own a tranny shop, and his cost to have it rebuilt was $600 and that's what he charged me, which is a great deal for a rebuilt 727; and since I had gotten the tranny essentially for free I didn't mind paying to have it working right. So now my costs have risen another $800 between the lower amount for my old parts and the tranny needing rebuilt. Old Mr. Mayhem is finally showing his face.
On the plus side, the owner of the speed shop is a long time Mopar guy who's been working on 440s for decades (and owns a 69 Roadrunner himself), and he has another customer who comes in with a 71 Cuda that another shop put a 440-6 into. It turned out the other shop just pulled a 440 from a truck, slapped a six pack intake on, and called it a day, so the engine still runs like a truck engine.
So fortune favors on the foolish (me) when the Cuda owner tells the shop owner to just pull the engine and he can do whatever he likes with it because the Cuda owner wants a completely new engine built with all new parts! So now I don't have to worry about all the little bits and pieces my engine that might be missing as they'll all be coming, free of charge, from the Cuda engine.
Fortune favors me a bit more when the shop owner makes a trip to Gainesville to get a set of rebuilt 915 heads for the Cuda, and finds not one but two sets at the machine shop. Turns out someone down south was getting a car ready for the Gator Nationals, and ordered two sets of 915 heads, but then the project failed and the machine shop was stuck with the heads, and when the my shop's owner came in and said he would buy both sets for the right price, they made him a smoking deal to recoup their losses. So I ended up with a set of totally rebuilt 915 heads, with hardened seats, new everything, plus a new camshaft that's cut for the heads, for $800! One last bit of good news is the engine I bought had a Hemi torque convertor on it. I was hoping that given the previous owners of the engine had put so many performance parts on it (Mallory distro, MP valve covers, mini-starter, HP fuel pump, etc.) that the internal stuff would be upgraded as well, and I wasn't disappointed.
So my engine swap costs have risen from $400 of my own money to $2,282, but that includes a rebuilt transmission, rebuilt 915 heads, a correct camshaft, and $212 I had to pay for a new aluminum three-core radiator. So I'm going to have a lot more power and reliability than I was originally shooting for, and I'm still $118 under my original budget, and that's before I make some money back by selling the SB radiator that was in the car, the SB kickdown linkage and some other parts off the 360, and the BB purple camshaft and lifters I don't need anymore. Hopefully I'll be able to get about $400 for those... just enough to get a good sure grip 8.75 rear maybe?
While my original target budget was $8,000, that was just to get a car back on the road and looking good, and I never imagined I would be at $8,000 and have a car with a roaring 440 and that looks good enough to get invited to car shows.
I'm expecting the next stages of the project, getting a sure-grip rear, a suspension rebuild, seat covers, and replacing all the weather stripping will put me over my original budget, but I'm still looking at having a top-notch car for under $10k if I do it all right.
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Love the car and your approach/method on the build. Think you could give us some more details on how your painter went about using POR-15? I checked out the POR-15 website and they have more products now than just the basic rust-preventative coating most of us have seen before.
They've got single and 2 part topcoats and clearcoats as well. What did you use? Is it the basic POR-15 rust coating and then block sanded? Or is there a clear over the POR-15 after block sanding as well? Sorry if I missed it in your previous posts.
Because it looks great and I'm interested for my next project. (If I ever finish the current one, lol)
There's a whole process for using POR-15 as it's intended to be used, but these guys just use it as a base primer and they treat it like any other primer except you just can't spray it because it'll ruin a spray gun. They don't use the other POR-15 products since the POR-15 will be covered with standard paint and clearcoat.
They just applied it with brushes, which looks like hell at first (as would any paint you brush on a car). But once you sand the POR-15, it looks like just as good as a primer you sprayed on and sanded, so the sanding is the key rather than the application method. The thing you do need to be careful about is not letting any water, not even a drop of sweat, get into the POR-15 container as it'll ruin it. Use a new, dry, brush.
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so let me get this straight.... Of all people YOU are putting a GM spoiler on your car?? lol :boxing:
Sorry brother I had too ;)
For what it's worth I love the look of both spoilers and what you've done with the graphics. As I stated earlier I love everything about this build thread, the car, the concept, the budget and the theme.
Awesome!
I thought about the morality of affixing a Camaro part to the car, but I decided to do it for two reasons. The first was the Camaro part was just about identical to the custom part, and since there is no spoiler for this car ever designed by Mother Mopar, I figured it didn't really make a difference if I used a Brand X part that fits or a custom part.
The second reason was the point of the project was to make the car look like it would if I built it in the late 1970s, and back then I would be more worried about price and adaptability rather than manufacturer.