2.5 duratec engine swap on fox body

BNZAG

New Member
Aug 15, 2010
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hello, i just got a 93 mustang lx 2.3 n/a for $500. i love the car but sucks getting beat by almost every car on the street. my friend has a 2.5 ford duratec engine out of a 1996 contour does anybody know if its possible to swap it into the mustang.
 
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Find a 7.5" rear with 3.73:1 gears. You will need to change your speedometer gear too. The 3.73 gears will be 100 times easier to install and it will give you the off-the-line advantage you need.
 
GT's may have 3:73 gears in an AOD but 2.3's normally haver 3:08's

Negative grasshopper. Automatic 2.3 cars came from the factory with 3.73's in the 7.5 inch rear. V8 cars came with either 2.73's or 3.08's in the 8.8 rear. It depended on what box the owner checked, regardless of tranmission choice.:nice:
 
BNZAG have you removed the air restrictor in your intake muffler yet?

Can you legally gut your catalytic converters in your state?

Those two mods can do wonders.

I also think a 5 speed swap might be an easier project for you. I can at least help you with a complete parts list and step-by-step instructions. The project is still fresh in my mind and I have tons of pics. My T5 swap ran me about $850.00 for all the parts and machine work. The T5 has a much steeper first gear (3.35, 3.93, or 4.03) and will give you the added off-the-line torque you need.

Personally I would love you to try the 2.5L swap and succeed 100% but for the most part, you will be blazing new trails for everyone here. I would love to hear some swap success stories that do not involve a 2.3L Turbo swap from a Thunderbird or a 5.0 swap. :shrug:

I will never understand why they used the "boat anchor" 3.8L V6 or the "Log-head" 3.3L inline six in mustangs. I think the 3.0L Vulcan V6, the Duratec 3.0L V6, and your great idea, the 2.5L Duratec are all outstanding engines and would have made for some very interesting mustangs through the late 80's and beyond. I hope for the best for you regardless of what route you choose to take and if you go the way of the 2.5L engine swap make sure to photograph everything and keep tons of notes. You might just start a trend. :nice:
 
a 2.5L 4 cyl from a 99-01 Ranger would be an easy swap considering they are the same basic motor with a little more stroke and better manifolds, but i think a great swap to try would be the later all aluminum 2.5L from a 05-up Ford Ranger. I gotta think it would be pretty easy comparably speaking, and the 2.5l 4 bangers are good for 200hp with just cams and a little tuning.
 
Nobody mentioned the pushrod 4.0L because it's the very definition ofa truck engine. A mountain of torque starts right off-idle and signs off early by ~4800rpm. It's also entirely cast iron and not exactly light weight.

For it's intended purpose as a light truck engine, the 4.0L is great. As a performance passenger car engine, it's probably not. I have heard complaints from Explorer owners that the OHC 4.0L traded low-end torque for higher-end power, so maybe that's something to look into. :shrug:
 
I rebuilt 2.3 n/a ,see " 2.3 rebuild not up to expectations", recently i added a crower solid roller cam .465 , 278 dur. I raced a co worker against his 2.0 duratech contour and he blew me away! he said it had almost 300k mi on it. If you get the duratech eng in it will run good
 
I'm sorry, but the contour V-6 is a T-U-R-D of an engine. I see no point in this swap at all. Those engines get average at best fuel economy, and will make a disappointing amount of power for the work involved - which will be significant and extremely expensive with lots of custom fabrication and one off parts.