this may have been covered...but why are your side steps so 'thick'? They look incredibly heavy.
The material was free, so I may have went overboard with thicknesses.
this may have been covered...but why are your side steps so 'thick'? They look incredibly heavy.
Contrary to popular belief there are zero frame modifications to be done to install an 8.1L when using the proper accessory brackets and exhaust manifolds. If you Google 8.1L swap you will find a swap article from a WyoTech Instructor that installed an 8.1L in an 80's GM crew cab. The guy did not research his swap very well or he would have discovered the frame did not need to be hacked up to make room for the A/C compressor and exhaust manifolds. Using GM Medium Duty Truck or G-Van accessory brackets allow the A/C compressor to mount up on top the engine opposed to the side of the engine where the frame interference occurs. He would have also discovered the 8.1L will accept any older BBC exhaust manifold or header. A set of 454 exhaust manifolds would have saved him from cutting the frame for exhaust clearance. Lastly, he would have discovered the firewall doesn't need to be hackup either to make room for the EGR valve as the valve can be removed and the EGR function tuned out of the ECM as well as about 10 other things he wasted time and money doing. If you look at my swap pictures there are zero frame mods. I pulled a 7.4L out in the morning and stuffed the 8.1L in that same afternoon. The 8.1L is a straight drop in to the existing small block or big block mounts as well so no modifications there although there will be some oil pan clearance issues to deal with, which the ORD HD engine cross member can fix. You can't say all of that for a Gen III small block. You will also play hell finding the proper exhaust manifold or header to fit a Gen III small block in an old truck without cutting the frame. In my opinion the 8.1L is a much easier swap than any Gen III 5.3L, 6.0L or 6.2L with much greater rewards.
I have gotten overwhelmed with PM's and emails from various forums where people want to know how to go about an 8.1L swap. Given my worn-out enthusiasm to address every PM from people that just want to pick my brain to death without doing any research of their own I created this thread to help people with their 8.1L curiosities. Check it out :ylsmoke:
I don't have a build thread on my 8.1L swap but I do have all of the pictures here. I think you will agree it is a sanitary swap with no. The plan for my Polar Bear Suburban will even be cleaner :elkgrin:
Larry, I have to speak up a bit here. The Wyotech instructor you are talking about here was my instructor while I was at Wyotech. So I have to stick up a bit for him. This truck he built was simply awesome. Crew cab short bed. He was building this thing while I was in school. This was back in 05-06. There was very little knowledge of the 8.1 and what parts work and don't. Very little Internet support if you will. Gary is a very smart and talented mechanic and fabricator.
So he did what he needed to get the swap done. At the time this was done it was some groundbreaking work. (I never heard or read at the time of anyone doing this) last if you look closely you can see the frame is fully boxed. This truck also started out as a crew cab dually that was shorted for the short box. So frame mods were not really a bid deal. It would never go back to stock. Here's a pic of it finished.
I did not think until after I asked, but with you running the nv4500 manual, it does not need to know if you are in 4 low, or how fast you are going.
Interesting perspective beags. I was thinking, if it was not for the internet I would not know that the frame could be left in tact. That being said, it is kind of misleading now when you do a google search and your instructors frame cutting recipe for the swap is among the top results. As such, if Larry hadn't set me right, I would have been putting in a 6.0 right now because of the Wyotech pdf.
What gears would be best for the standard 350 and 700r4 pushing 36" tires?