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Old 03-09-2019, 09:23 AM   #1
cerial
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Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: Ionia, MI
Posts: 199
87 5.3 swap advise.

I have a 87 V10 with a tired 5.7,700r4,208, 10,10 3.42 that I want to swap the entire drive train on.

Had the thing almost a year just doing weekend projects on it while driving it. What I have done so far besides just refreshing the stock stuff to keep the engine reliable, wheels turning, and the thing stopping proper is to install a different fuel tank loosing the side tanks for a in cab eec 72 tank. Build a flatbed with a headache bar which acts to aid in protecting the tank in the event of a side hit or roll and installed a much larger new radiator I had laying around when I installed a block heater which the truck likes on those mornings when it is in the negatives.

The tank sits in the cab behind the rear bench and has 3 ports that gravity feed to a Walboro pump that goes up to the tbi regulator then back to the return(the old 3/8 carb feed line) pushing the excessive fuel back into the tank. I am using a combination of green stripe high pressure lines and steel brake line for fuel lines. I would like to re use this fuel system just adding some additional green stripe lines and LS barb (push to connect) fittings to feed the rails.


The axles and suspension is being saved for later at this point.


I have a 02 Silverado 5.3 which I will be mating to a 2wd sm465 then running that to a divorced 3 speed brownie (1.52, 1/1, .72/1)married to a 10 spline np205. The brownie will be mainly for splitting the sm465 gears and some overdrive.

Now I am not a "lifted" truck kind of guy. I like my rides low and easy to get into. My trucks are work trucks not toys. I want a flat belly with everything possible above the rails and simply trimming things a bit to run 33-35" tires.
The floor is far past gone on this. The driver supports(not just the floor panel)the actual supports that hold up the cab are to the point where they are rusted and cracked over the rails. I knew what I wanted to be do from the start which involved cutting into the back of the cab and would require building a floor so I was ok with the excessive rust. I am also building some light weight removable doors for this.
When I build the entire floor, partial firewall, and doors. I want to raise the engine transmission and such into the cab so the belly of this is flat. The 205 will be clocked flat of course.
It is not a sports car. I drive it and use it like a old street driven wood truck. I am ok with having a bit higher gravity if that keeps things easy to work on and worry free if I am going through the woods rubbing the belly against some logs.

Enough rambling back to the engine.


I am looking at flipping the truck manifolds forward and up then running the exhaust 180 going back to the firewall and down the outside of the side of rails. While I know the passenger side will work is there any issue with the drivers side hitting anything such as the alternator bracket or anything?

I am going to move the heat sink coils on top of the intake using the old engine cover mounts as a bracket mount and just run longer msd wires ontop the bell and under the manifolds.


This is what I am thinking for mounts;


The brownie and 205 will be married bolted to a skid plate that is set up against the bottom of the rails with 4, 1/2" rubber isolators to deaden vibration. I am using the same 1/2" isolators on the bed, cab and front clip. Keep things nice and simple.

The sm465 will use the factory mount hard mounted to a cross bar that bolts to the bottom of the rails with the same 1/2" rubber isolators.

For the engine mounts I am thinking front plate that sits atop the rails with 1/2" rubber isolators.
That should keep things easy as far as adjusting the engine height and location as well as pulling the engine easily for clutch changes or general maintenance such as a oil pan gasket.

That being said I have not seen any LS square bodies with a front plate so is there a horrible downside? I am using a steel bell and there will be 2 mounts at the front of the engine and another 2 at the rear of the transmission. I will get a Lakewood knock off steel bell later that works with the factory starter. I am keeping this engine basically in stock form around 280 ft/lbs and don't see a need for it to make anything more then 330ft/lbs. I don't want to build a ground up engine. I like the the idea of swapping a bad long block in for a used "better" long block in mind. Just bolting the stuff up making a weekend thing out of it. As far as mounts go will a front plate be alright with say 330 ft/lbs?
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1991 Metro commuter
1991 s10 future project truck
1987 V10 backup daily/junk truck
1985 K20 Winter beater
1991 R30(squarebody) c/c flatbed towrig
1994 s10 80"wb custom build

Last edited by cerial; 03-09-2019 at 09:34 AM.
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