Engine Engine rebuild suggestions

Ok. Well, here are a few P-headed combos in our dyno & 1/4 mile thread:
- v8stang289's combo: 277 RWHP, but ran a best trap of 101.6mph @ close to stock weight (not the kind of speed I'd expect)
- Grabbin' Asphalt: 280 rwhp (Cobra intake & Gt40p heads both fully ported & milled with an E-cam - no slips to back it up, but porting makes this feasible)
- RangerJoe: 268rwhp (Ported Cobra, Iron GT40's TFS1 with 1.77rr & he's run at least a [email protected] backing up his dyno)
- Michael Nadeau: 244rwhp (Ported GT40 intake, GT40Ps, N41 cam, but the claim 1/8 mi suggests more (or lighter) than what the dyno shows: 8.41 @ 86.4 mph more than backing up the dyno)
- foureyefox347: 109.93 mph (347 c.i. Gt40p ported, 650 holley on a Edelbrock rpm intake). Probably in the 300 rwhp range
- Bob F: 273 rwhp (GT40p heads, ported Cobra intake, stock cam - only 99.5 mph suggesting nothing like the dyno'd rwhp unless it's in a bus)
- 86HO5.0: 281 rwhp (Ported explorer intake, P-heads, stock cam - I have to be honest... no way in hell. No timeslips to back it up, but has provided some datalogs of a couple of pulls that I can do some analysis on. Sometimes dyno's are just happy, especially SAE corrections)
- Chuckman: 264rwhp (Stock '01 Explorer longblock (P-heads + GT40 intake, tfs stage1 cam, claimed he trapped in the 100-101 range)

So, what do we get out of all of that? If you just slap unported P-heads on then you might only run 101-ish mph in the 1/4. With proper tuning & supporting mods (cam-intake-induction) maybe 260 rwhp range, which is not much, maybe 10-15rwhp, shy of what the aluminum X-headed combos tend to make.
 
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No concrete plans really :) Just trying to clean it up, make it daily drivable and give it a few horses. At this point, I was able to find some GT40P heads and bought a Stage 1 TFS cam. Still looking for a better intake than my stock, but for now that's less important than the other stuff I already picked up. We'll see how it turns out.
Find them - Yes. I wouldn't start the installation until you got your hands on an intake. It is right there with the heads as far as bottlenecks.
 
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Alright, the pistons are in. That was a bigger PITA then I expected. The ring compression tool from HF wasn't as easy as the tool looked in the videos. Also, I'd say 6 out of 8 pistons had the rod bearing move out of position as I was tapping the piston head to get it on the crank. 1 or 2 pistons I had to pull out and reset the bearing, the rest I kind of pushed the bearing in place with a screwdriver making sure not to scratch anything. Other than that, everything still spins freely, so on to the next step which I'm thinking is the timing gear.
pistonsAreIn.jpg
 
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Progress update. Moving on to Head work next.

Question that I was thinking about-- I need to rebuild my manual transmission as well, but I can do that over the winter. The question is, once I have the engine back in the car, can I start it or do I need the transmission and driveshaft hooked up? Or, to put it differently, what is the minimum I need hooked up to start it and make sure it runs?

waterPumpOn.webp
 
Engine is looking good man!

Install the bell housing and block it up. You just want it where as the motor torques the bell housing has enough room on the blocks that it can move that little bit. Sketchy scale would be about a 5 out of 10 in my garage.

If the motor was balanced with the clutch assembly on it then all of that will need to be installed as well but I'm pretty sure you know that.
 
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Finally found myself some time to work on the engine. Moved on to cleaning up the heads I bought (GT40P). They already came with the stiffer valve springs. My plan was to pull off the springs/valve and clean first. However, I can't get the keepers out. I've tried compressing different springs, with the same result. The spring compresses, I can move the valve up and down but the top plate and the keepers that go inside of it don't move on the valve stem. I use the cheap overhead valve compressor (it does fine compressing the spring). I even tried pulling the keepers out with a small screwdriver and pic, nothing. I've thought about using a socket over the spring once it's compressed to get things loose, but I'm afraid to bend the valve head or stem.

Anyone have any advice? Thank you!

valveSprings.webp
 
A magnet should pull them out with the spring compressed. I use a little pocket screw driver with a magnet on the back.

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yea, my problem is I bought that simple jaw compressor
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It compresses the spring against the top retainer where the keepers are and the keepers don't move within their place. Magnet doesn't pull them out. Even tried a small screwdriver. I just bought the c-style compressor tool that I'm going to try. That one compresses the spring towards the valve head-- hopefully freeing up the keepers. Will post my results when I have them.
 
That compressor will work, I've used it on a set of GT40s to swap to a set of Trick Flow springs. The handle isn't very friendly once you start compressing the springs though - you'll want some good gloves. I used my insulated leather welding gloves. Get the spring compressed, push the valve up from the chamber side while holding the compressor and spring down to the casting, then remove the keepers with a magnet like @90sickfox suggested. Easy-peasy! :nice:
 
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sounds like when you did it, the retainer compressed down as the spring compressed. For me, the retainer doesn't move-- thus doesn't release/expose the keepers that remain seated- like it's stuck on the valve end tip. The head already has the TFS stronger springs. I just want to take it apart so I can clean and paint it. Maybe I need to shoot some PB Blaster in to the keepers to help them come loose. If you have any other ideas, I'll take them-- otherwise, hoping the different style of spring compressor will get the retainer to move down on the valve stem which will release the keepers.