kylesallee wrote:
Thank you for the information! What do you recommend doing if my motor won't take it? I am not sure that I am mechanically savvy enough to put in a new motor, but if I chose to go that route what do you recommend putting in and would I have to change the transmission and rear end and suspension, etc?
Thanks so much for your advice!
love4theluv and SRAD, whom, for lack of a better term, I'll refer to as our 'locals', know what they're talking about. They've got the practical experience; I do not. I am glad to say I've learned a few of the hard lessons secondhand through this wonderful site. I'm gonna have to steal that scale analogy. I wanted to add my two cents regarding the swap idea you initially mentioned. Others may feel differently, but this is a beginner's understanding of the field of
realistic options.
I was initially very intimidated by the thought of ANY major drivetrain deviation from the stock truck. Now, I'm reasonably sure I'm gonna go that way - eventually. Haruspex's link is probably the best information available pertaining specifically to the Chevy small block swap into the LUV. It does indeed replace the rear end and trans. Even with a straight 6, or the 3.8L v6 swap, Your 4 speed tranny and high-ratio rear end(My '75 is 4.56:1) just wouldn't handle it, and if you were to take it seriously, you should probably start by assuming the same needs to be done in your case. Still not a big deal! Remember - It's a very simple truck; It was designed to be. I love it for it's simplicity.
Swapping for a newer or larger engine wasn't even a
consideration when I bought the truck, but there are some things about the 1.8 I could stand to leave behind. I really want to learn how to see a full swap all the way through, and there truly isn't a better way to do so than to just say 'fuck it', find a good precedent to follow(or a friend who knows their shit), and head to the junkyard. From there, the parts hunt becomes kind of a mix between a detective novel and a game of cat-and-mouse. Now, before I let the engine swap pep rally get too far out of hand, let me pull a little nugget from the aforementioned engine swap guide itself:
"...this job is a tenhammer job on a scale of one to five to put it in perspective".
I am reasonably mechanically inclined and am capable of certain types of engine work, down to the head gaskets or so, and with that being said, I'd probably hire a local mechanic to do an entire engine swap. Guys that do it every day will miss all of the pot holes and hangups that you and I would spend hours solving or working around. Of course, that's also part of the fun - if I've got the time to burn.