^ indeed!
I was just in contact with them this morning. Looks like we are using a Mustang style one piece shaft. I need to get the dimensions to them to get the build going on it.
This weekend I'm going to work on getting the O.E. Cross Member altered/fabricated so I can get my final angles set, then get the measurements to them to start fabrication.
One step at a time! After she's hard mounted and the shaft in, most of the hard stuff is out of the way! PBH accessory kit is here, probably won't try it out until I get the motor in for final assembly, but looks first rate with detailed instructions/ect.
What experience with gears did you go through, if you don't mind?You will want to keep the 4:10's in the Marauder with the turbo.
Trust me
You shouldn't need 4:10s with a Turbo on a 281cubic inch motor, if you need to spin it that hard i guarantee your A.R. housing is too big for your motor, on a Marauder i wouldn't go any bigger than a 76mm single , or 62mm twins , small displacement motors work much better with smaller turbos fitted for that application.
If I can fabricate a single system on this setup based on space constraints, I was going to use the same ON3 78/76 i've been using, with the same .96 ex turbine housing.
The 5.0L seems to flow very similar CFM to the LS motors i've been using that turbo on, so I figured it would be a very fitting unit here as well.
A .96 AR housing is wayy too big for a 4.6l motor , but if your set on using it then yes your going to need 4:10s and a higher than normal stall to make that oversized turbo work, basically your pushing your powerband into the stratosphere due to the wrong sized turbo , i had 4 Buick Grand Nationals , i built each of them with the fastest running in the low 9s at 1072rwhp , if you dont get the turbo sized correctly you will have a 4K paper weight.
Turbo sizing is based off of airflow CFM characteristics, correct?
Just looking for a little clarification on the subject, that's all, no disrespect intended at all.
On GM LS motors, our smaller displacement setup was a 4.8L, which we've used 80mm setups on with a .96 AR. It would have no issue lighting the turbo by 3500rpm, but only because our heads flowed nearly 2x what a Ford 4.6L did, and therefore could spool it no problem.
I'm not using a 4.6L on this build, it's a Coyote 5.0L with heads that (somebody correct me if I'm WAY off, I don't have specs handy) flow in the 3xx range.
The last turbo 5.3L Fox we just built ran an ON3 78/76, .96 and was full spool by 3500 give/take.
An engine is nothing more than an air pump, and the turbo is sized to the amount of airflow going through it accordingly. We know the outgoing 4.6L is nothing in comparison to the 5.0L as far as airflow goes, so therefore, a turbo of a smaller size that would work on the 4.6L would severely restrict the much more efficient breathing 5.0L. She will be full spool at probably 2k, but be choked up with back pressure by 6k, with a redline of 8k (stock shift points on the Coyote 5.0L Mustang are 7200).
Again, just looking to wrap my mind around the subject more, no harm intended!
Turbo sizing is based off of airflow CFM characteristics, correct?
Just looking for a little clarification on the subject, that's all, no disrespect intended at all.
On GM LS motors, our smaller displacement setup was a 4.8L, which we've used 80mm setups on with a .96 AR. It would have no issue lighting the turbo by 3500rpm, but only because our heads flowed nearly 2x what a Ford 4.6L did, and therefore could spool it no problem.
I'm not using a 4.6L on this build, it's a Coyote 5.0L with heads that (somebody correct me if I'm WAY off, I don't have specs handy) flow in the 3xx range.
The last turbo 5.3L Fox we just built ran an ON3 78/76, .96 and was full spool by 3500 give/take.
An engine is nothing more than an air pump, and the turbo is sized to the amount of airflow going through it accordingly. We know the outgoing 4.6L is nothing in comparison to the 5.0L as far as airflow goes, so therefore, a turbo of a smaller size that would work on the 4.6L would severely restrict the much more efficient breathing 5.0L. She will be full spool at probably 2k, but be choked up with back pressure by 6k, with a redline of 8k (stock shift points on the Coyote 5.0L Mustang are 7200).
Again, just looking to wrap my mind around the subject more, no harm intended!