All the Other Little Things...


If only the project consisted of just the big, easy-to-grasp chunks that have been covered in the previous sections, maybe this swap would've taken less than almost a whole year.  Unfortunately, it's never like that.  In reality, there's a whole bunch of little things that connect all the big things together; no end of minor details that have to be figured out and dealt with before the swap could actually begin.  Here's the list, in no particular order:

Retrofitting an electric fuel pump and EFI tank

Rather than take a chance that a late-model YJ fuel pump would have the pressure and flow capacities that the 5.0L engine needs, I installed an stock-equivalent aftermarket 5.0L pump into a pump/sender bracket from a mid-90's YJ.  This took a little creative "adaptation" of the YJ bracket, since the V8 pump is actually a lot smaller in size than the YJ I6 pump - go figure.  It turns out that the pump intake hole fits through the bottom of the YJ bracket, and the factory pickup screen can be installed on the other side no problem.  I did find that the screen I got with the new aftermarket pump did not fit as well.  After the 4-6" of flexible line from the pump to the top of the bracket is installed, the pump is held in place plenty well enough.  The power and ground wires from the YJ bracket fit onto the pump's terminals perfectly, and the hose size was the same as well.
Here's a picture of the finished pump and bracket:

When Chrysler went to EFI on the YJ in 1991, they not only added a fuel pump, but they changed the tank slightly as well.  The 91+ tanks have a small plastic baffle thing attached to the bottom of the tank, that cups the pickup screen.  My understanding is that this baffle acts like a temporary fuel reservoir, making sure that the pickup is always submerged in fuel, even when the Jeep is on an angle and there's not much in the tank.  I swapped out the tank in my '89 with one from a '93, since I couldn't see a way to remove or retrofit the baffle.

I did have to play around a bit with the overall length of the pump bracket, since the screen seems to stick down further than it did with the YJ pump.  I added a second rubber gasket between the pump mounting flange and the tank, and that seemed to do the trick.

Installing a fuel filter and 3/8" fuel supply line

To go along with the Mustang pump, it made sense to use a factory fuel filter.  These parts were designed to be used together, and not knowing the pressure and flow ratings for any of these components, I wasn't inclined to mix and match them.  The Mustang uses a very simple, easily adaptable mounting bracket, so I incorporated it with the filter.  After looking at a few mounting options, it seemed easiest to mount the filter and bracket onto the front face of the gas tank skid plate.  Here's a picture of the mounted filter:

Also in the picture you can see the pieces of flexible high-pressure fuel line I used to connect the filter to the pump and to the hard line running along the driver's-side frame rail to the motor.  Both ends of every piece of flexible line were secured with twin EFI hose clamps.  These are special clamps made for specific sizes of line, and specifically for high pressure EFI systems.  They don't pinch the line, like gear-type clamps can.  The ones I used are Tridon p/n FI-6.

In the interest of preventing vapour-lock, I left the hard lines in the factory location on that side, opposite from the exhaust.  The downside to this approach is that the 302 fuel rail feed and return lines are on the right side of the engine, so I had to run sections of flexible line from the front ends of the hard lines on the left frame rail, hang them under the engine, and then connect them to the fuel rail quick-connects.

To make sure the 5.0L got all the gas it could guzzle, I replaced the factory 5/16" supply hard line with 3/8" line.  With the old powertrain removed, it was pretty easy to bend up some new bulk steel line to match the old one.  A tubing bender and flaring tool came in handy - I put mild flares on each end of the hard line to help keep the flexible lines from sliding off, once the hose clamps were in place.

Motor Mounts

Before I get into the motor mounts, let me say that they are my least favourite part of the new powertrain setup.  My original plan was to use some home-brew mounts on top of the original 258 frame mounts.  Once the engine was lowered into place, it quickly became apparent that this wouldn't work - the exhaust manifolds cleared the motor mount brackets by no more than half an inch.  So, faced with having to come up with a solution that didn't require a welder or large amounts of cutting, here's what I ended up with:
It's not pretty, but it'll hold until I come up with something better in the spring.  In hindsight, it would have been better to grind off the factory mounts altogether, and weld on some new mounts a bit further back and several inches lower down.

For any CJ owners out there who are contemplating this swap, the motor mount problem can be solved much more elegantly on your case, since the CJ motor mounts bolt right to the frame instead of using welded-on brackets like the YJ.  Just replace the driver's side motor mount with a second passenger-side mount, and the engine can be bolted to them without much trouble.

Tranny/tcase mount and skidplate

In one of those rare strokes of luck that sometimes accompanies projects like this, once the engine was locked into place and the gearboxes were test-fit in situ for the first time, I found that the adapter between my t-cases ended up right over the central rib in the factory YJ skidplate.  That, plus the fact that it still proved physically possible to install the skidplate under the new powertrain, led to the design of this skidplate mount:
I deliberately didn't design this mount until after everything was in place, since there wasn't any way to accurately measure exactly where everything would end up.  So the mount was designed against the angles of the sides of the adapter, it was welded together, and the appropriate angled holes were drilled into the body of the adapter.  The rubber pucks are factory tranny mounts from the same Early Bronco that the D20 came from, trimmed to clear the NP203 on the far side of the adapter.  The nice thing about this design is that it provides the same anti-rotational effect as the torque arm on the factory YJ tranny mount, as well as being a support for the rear half of the powertrain.

Right now only the two factory mounting holes in the skidplate are used.  I will be adding one more bolt on each end of the mount, as well as drain holes for the two mount struts.

Fitting the transmission shifter

One somewhat unfortunate side effect of swapping in a shorter engine and a shorter tranny is that the tranny shifter ends up being a lot further forward than before.  The Ford pickups and Broncos that used the 302 and NP435s (or T18s) needed very aggressively-bent tranny shifters to clear the dashboards, and my YJ now needed something similar.  A little judicious application of Larry's torch was all that was required to persuade the NP435's shifter that it would fit in the Jeep, and some more gentle persuasion with my electric grinder convinced the Jeep's transmission tunnel that it would accommodate the top cover of the NP435 poking through it:
In first gear, the shifter clears the dash with just enough distance that I don't smack my knuckles into it.  It does hit the top of the center console in reverse though, but is well enough engaged in gear at that point that there's no problem.  The other three gears have shorter throws, so there's no interference problems there.

Transfer case shifters

I haven't installed shifters for the transfer cases yet, but I do plan on doing this before the first snowfall, so I can get in and out of 4wd without having to lock and unlock my hubs all the time.  The NP203 shifter will use a conveniently located pivot hole cast into the right side of the NP435, and a modified D20/D21 shift lever, with a home-made linkage rod between the shifter and the shift cam (or whatever it's called) on the NP203.

The D20 twin sticks will be made from some modified D18 factory twin sticks, assuming they can be modified to work.  A pivot point will be created using some flat plate attached to the PTO port bolts on the left side of the NP203 reduction box.  Home-made linkage rods will connect the levers to the shift rods on the transfer case.

The three transfer case shifters will all be pretty low to the ground inside the Jeep, to avoid interference with the tranny shifter.  Since the NP203 shifter will be on the right of the transmission tunnel, and the D20 twin-sticks will be on the left, all three should line up pretty will in a row, 6-8" in front of the center console.

Radiator and hoses

The radiator was another one of those things I decided to ignore until the swap was done, since I had no idea if the factory YJ 4.2L radiator would provide enough cooling for the 5.0L.  After hooking everything up, warming the engine up, and working all the bubbles out of the cooling system, it looks to be allright.  My rad was re-cored a year or so before the swap (some incentive there for me to keep it), and I'm running the factory YJ fan shroud, the factory 5.0L thermostat, and the factory 5.0L mechanical fan and fan clutch.  The engine runs a little warmer than the 4.2L did, but not by much.  And that temperature hardly budges on hills, in the city, or on the freeway.  We'll see how it does in the heat next summer, I guess!

For lack of anything else to aim for when deciding on the engine placement, I decided to put the 5.0L's fan more or less smack in the middle of the YJ's fan shroud, with about half an inch of clearance between the fan and rad fins.  So no modification of the shroud or rad mounting was necessary.

As for the rad hoses, fortunately the Mustang and YJ radiator inlets and outlets are on the same side, all I needed to do was come up with some hoses to connect my old rad to the new engine.  I was pleasantly surprised to see that my original YJ lower hose connected up just fine.  In fact, both of the hose fittings on the 5.0L are the same size as the ones on the 4.2L.

The upper hose wasn't quite so cooperative.  I ended up splicing together the motor-end of the factory YJ upper hose to a chunk of the factory Mustang upper hose, using a PVC hose splice from the local Home Despot.  I was warned against using a galvanized steel splice - apparently antifreeze and the galvanizing material don't play well together.  Here are two pictures showing the hybrid rad hose:

Power steering

Here's another part of this project that I lucked out with.  I had the pump-end of the Mustang high-pressure PS hose spliced to the gearbox-end of my original YJ hose, hooked it up, hose-clamped the YJ return line to the Mustang pump, and... it worked!  A local hydraulic hose shop did the splice for me.  Both hoses are 3/8" ID, so this worked out well.

Now, I don't have a PS cooler and I haven't really stressed the PS system yet, but so far on the street and during some mild 'wheeling, it hasn't given me any trouble.  I've read that a PS hose from a 91+ YJ with the 4.0L has the same pump-end fitting as the Ford PS pump, so it would be a "bolt-in" hose for this conversion.  If my spliced hybrid-hose fails, I'll replace it with one of those.  My spliced hose is somewhat visible in the photo in the next section, down below the oil filter.

Oil filter relocator

Not long after getting the engine positioned where I wanted it, I found that the 302's oil filter port pointed right smack into the driver's-side frame rail.  This looked to be a Bad Thing.  Fortunately (I suppose), Lordco was happy to take more of my money in exchange for an oil filter relocator kit.  This kit includes an adapter that screws into the filter port on the engine, and two hoses to connect that to a second special adapter that the filter screws into.  I mounted the filter up on the driver's-side fender, as you can see here:
This location was chosen pretty much because it was the only place there was room for the bloody thing.  It's reasonably convenient, but it'll probably be kinda messy when it comes time to change the filter.

Re-using the Jeep's factory gauges

Surprisingly, it was possible to adapt every one of the YJ's factory gauges to the new powertrain.  While they're probably not the most precise measurement device ever built, I was used to how my gauges behaved, and they're a useful tool for getting a feel for how "happy" the new engine is.  Maybe someday I'll replace the whole package with an expensive set of Autometer gauges, but that might require some significant modification to the dash, if it's possible at all.  For now, I'm happy to have a complete set that match and are reasonably reliable.  Here's how each of the gauges was adapted:

The vacuum system

There were vacuum schematics included in the electrical drawings I bought, and in the Haynes manual.  I got the Mustang's vacuum harness with the engine I bought, and it looked pretty straightforward.  There is a solenoid harness with several hard plastic vacuum lines for the two air pump solenoids, the EGR valve solenoid, and the vacuum reservoir.  This harness attaches to an engine harness with more hard lines going to the air valves, the EGR valve, and to the intake manifold.  The rest of the vacuum lines are rubber, and are centered around a plastic five-port vacuum distribution manifold, which has is ports marked for easy hookup.  One line is source vacuum from the intake manifold, one goes to the brake booster, one I connected to the YJ's fresh air vent motor, and the other two I capped.  Here's a picture of it:

The 302 seems to put out enough vacuum for the YJ's brake booster.  The brakes still work, at least...

The solenoid harness got mounted to the passenger side of the firewall, below the starter solenoid near the battery tray.  Since the solenoids have to connect to the wiring harness as well, they had to be mounted in this area to get everything to reach.  Even then, I had to splice in 8" extensions to the wires going to the solenoids.

Rather than figure out mounting for the Mustang vacuum reservoir, I just re-used the YJ's, and capped its second, unused port.  Its location on the passenger-side fender was ideal.

A custom exhaust

There were a whole bunch of options here.  To keep costs down, I decided to run factory truck 302 exhaust manifolds.  Conventional wisdom is that manifolds are better for low-end torque, and I'd been told that the factory Mustang headers would interfere with the YJ frame rails.  I didn't actually confirm this, but I'd bet its likely given the amount of space available and the length of the headers.  Another factor here is the clutch external slave cylinder.  The F150 and other trucks with this setup (and the 302) have the exhaust pipe connection on the driver's-side manifold set further forward than on the passenger side, so the Y-pipe avoids the slave cylinder.  It's important to note that Marquis and other car manifolds will not work with the external slave setup, since their left-side manifolds don't have this feature.

The downside to using truck manifolds is that the truck 302 only had one oxygen sensor, so I had to have my custom-made Y-pipe made with a sensor bung welded into the left-side downpipe.  K&N sells these weld-in bungs for a few bucks.

Anyway, as you may have figured out, I ran a single exhaust.  It runs down the passenger side of the Jeep, opposite from the front driveshaft.  Local smog laws require that I run a catalytic converter with the same air-pump feed that the Mustang had (thankfully I don't have to run dual cats like the 'Stang).  The cat I chose is a 2.5" 3-stage Walker, center-in/center-out, and it's followed by a Flowmaster 3-chamber 2.5" center-in/center-out muffler.  The Flowmaster is built very tough - it should last a while, and it sounds good too.

As much fun as a dual exhaust might have been, it would've cost me twice as much in mufflers and cats, and I very much doubt there would've been room to run a cat and muffler on the driver's side, with the front driveshaft taking up room over there as well.  If you don't have to run cats, it is possible to run dual exhausts - I've seen it done once.

The shop that installed the exhaust for me re-used the YJ's exhaust hangers, and I left the muffler heat shield in place under the tub.  When I got the Jeep home after the exhaust was in, I hooked up the 302's catalytic converter air feed outlet to the cat using heater hose (from the check valve on the engine) spliced to a section of teflon hose that connected to the cat's air tube.  This special high-temp teflon hose is part of a kit for doing exactly this kind of thing.  It's made by Walker, p/n WAK-35574.

On to the next section: Doing the swap!

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