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Explorer intake...help

  • Thread starter Thread starter StarFox07
  • Start date Start date Aug 13, 2007
S

StarFox07

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Jun 10, 2005
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Aug 13, 2007
#1
  • Aug 13, 2007
  • #1
Alright i'm really sorry if this has been posted, but I didnt see it on a search...

Ok I just bought a explorer intake from a junkyard, I have the upper/lower and all the bolts that went with it. They took off the fuel rail and injectors, do I need them? What all do I need to complete the swap. I assume all the lines match up with my stock 5.0 (91) and there is no fabrication needed. Am I right?
 

jrichker

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Your Stock fuel injectors will work fine, I think that the stock rails will work OK too.

Explorer intake swap.

I got mine off a 96 Mountaineer with the 19# injectors and 65 MM throttle body for $250.

The ACT (Air Charge Temp) sensor will probably need to be moved. The GT 40 lower manifold isn't drilled & tapped for it to go into the intake like the stock manifold was. There is a boss cast into the GT 40, but a machine shop will have to drill & tap the new manifold. The best spot for the ACT is the air box if you don't do the drill and tap thing. You get to cut and splice the 2 ACT wires in order to make them long enough to reach the air box. Solder the wire extensions on the existing wires & use heat shrink tubing to cover the splices. Offset the place where you cut the wires so that you don't have a big bulge when you put heat shrink over the 2 wires to cover & protect them. The air box gets a hole (5/8" or so) for the ACT drilled about 1 1/4" down & 1/1/4" in on the front top side near the upper radiator hose. A brass fitting nut from Home Depot or Ace Hardware secures the ACT into the air box.

If you are very clever, you will find that the ACT connector comes apart so that you can remove the pins. A very small screwdriver releases the lock in the front of the center insert, while another small screwdriver inserted in the back pushes it out. Once the center insert is out of the connector shell, the pins come out easily. New pins are available from AutoZone in a $5 electrical pin kit for Fords. Crimping the pins on the extender wires saves you from having to splice them twice: once to put the connector on and once to extend the wires.

6 ft black 18 gauge wire
6 ft green 18 gauge wire
6 ft 1/4" heat shrink tubing
1 ft 3/16" heat shrink tubing

Measure the 2 extender wires & cut them to length, crimp one set of pins on them. Then mate up the extender pins with the wiring harness & slide the 3/16" heat shrink tubing over them & shrink the tubing. Then slide the 1/4" heat shrink tubing over the pair of wires and shrink the tubing. When you are done you'll have about 1" of wire left without heat shrink tubing on it to strip & crimp the new pins on. Stick the new pins in the old connector shell, assemble it and you are done. It looks as good as factory. Some wire loom can be used to enhance the "Factory Look".




Use the TPS and IAB from your old throttle body. All the EGR passages were there and fit OK. Use you old fuel rails and regulator. You will probably need a new EGR spacer adapter and gaskets. Without the EGR spacer, there is no place to mount the throttle linkage support bracket.

I used the stock water lines on the Explorer manifold and they connected up to the EGR without any problems. I made a “U” out of ½” copper pipe and sweat soldered it together. Then I used it and some hose with clamps to bypass the leaky heater I have. You don't need heat very often here in Central Florida...

Vacuum line connections:
One large vacuum line from the upper front goes to the carbon canister

One large vacuum line from the rear goes to the vacuum tree.

One small line in the front feeds the Smog pump solenoid control valves on the rear of the passenger side wheel well..

One small line in the rear goes to the fuel pressure regulator.

One small line in the rear goes to the EGR suction regulator.

One large line in the rear goes to the PVC valve.

Diagram courtesy of Tmoss & Stang&2birds - Typical Vacuum Routing for a Fox stang 5.0:


See the following website for some help from Tmoss (diagram designer) & Stang&2Birds (website host) for help on 88-95 wiring http://www.veryuseful.com/mustang/tech/engine/

Here's some tips...

Tools: a good torque wrench is a must have item. A razor blade scraper that holds a single edge razor blade from Home Depot or Ace hardware is another handy thing. Get a Chilton or Haynes shop manual - you'll need it for the bolt torques and patterns. The intake manifold has an especially odd pattern. You'll need access to a timing light to set the timing after you re-stab the distributor. Look in the A/C repair section for the fuel line tools. They look like little plastic top hats. You will need the 1/2" & 5/8" ones. The hat shaped section goes on facing the large part of the coupling. Then you press hard on the brim until it forces the sleeve into the coupling and releases the spring. You may need someone to pull on the line while you press on the coupling. Put some motor oil on them when you put the line back together.

The A/C Compressor comes off with lines still connected. Mark all the electrical, smog and vacuum lines with tags to help you remember where to re-connect them. If you have a digital camera, take several pictures.

Whatever you do, don't skimp on cleaning the gasket surfaces. New gaskets need to seat against bare metal and not the residue left from the old gaskets in order to seal leak free. This is the most time consuming and tiresome part of the job. I suggest that you make good use of a shop vac while you are scraping and cleaning to avoid getting the old gasket material lost inside the engine. Look for little things that need to be replaced like the short hose from the thermostat hosing to the water pump, damaged vacuum lines and hose clamps that are rusted or broken.

Plan on cutting the thermostat to water pump hose, or removing the thermostat housing. Also plan on removing the distributor to get clearance to remove the intake manifold. Remove #1 spark plug, stick your finger in the spark plug hole and crank. When your finger gets air moving past it, stop cranking. Turn the engine until the timing marks line up with the pointer. Now you can pull the distributor out.

My favorite trick that saves time and effort is the stay in place gasket. Be sure that you scrape (don't use a wire brush) all the old gasket material off, then clean all the surfaces with acetone or MEK.

When the surfaces are clean, use weather strip adhesive on the head to manifold surface. Also use the weather strip adhesive on the side of the gasket that mates to the head. When you are done, the head surface and the gasket surface that mate together will have weather strip adhesive on them. Follow the instructions on the tube or can and when it gets tacky, press the gasket down on the head.

Clean the area where the rubber rails mount to the block in front and in the rear with more acetone or MEK and do the same trick with the weather strip adhesive that you did to the heads.

Coat the rubber seals and the gasket area around the water passages with lots of Blue Silicone gasket sealer and put it together. TADA! no leaks, and no gaskets that shifted out of place.

Fuel injector seal kits with 2 O rings and a pintle cap (Borg-Warner P/N 274081) are available at Pep Boys auto parts. Cost is about $2.74 per kit. The following are listed at the Borg-Warner site ( http://www.borg-warner.com ) as being resellers of Borg-Warner parts:

http://www.partsplus.com/ or http://www.autovalue.com/ or http://www.pepboys.com/ or http://www.federatedautoparts.com/

Most of the links above have store locators for find a store in your area.

Use motor oil on the O rings when you re-assemble them & everything will slide into place. The gasoline will wash away any excess oil that gets in the wrong places and it will burn up in the combustion chamber.

Plan on doing an oil change within 2 hours of run time on the engine. This will get the debris and coolant out of the oil pan.

Consumable items:
Upper manifold gasket
Fel Pro 1250 or equal lower manifold gasket set.
Short formed hose between thermostat hosing and intake manifold
6 ft 7/64" or 1/8" vacuum hose
2 ft 1/2" heater hose
1 1/2 ft 5/8" heater hose
Blue Silicone sealer
ARP antiseize or equal for the bolts
4 each 3/4" hose clamps (spare item in case the old ones are bad)
4 each 1/2" hose clamps (spare item)
 
S

StarFox07

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Jun 10, 2005
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Aug 13, 2007
#3
  • Aug 13, 2007
  • #3
Thanks for all the info man, seems alot more complicated than i thought.
 
2

2002BLGT

Well-Known Member
Dec 18, 2003
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Bedford VA
Aug 13, 2007
#4
  • Aug 13, 2007
  • #4
StarFox07 said:
Thanks for all the info man, seems alot more complicated than i thought.
Click to expand...

its not bad at all really .....just dive in , you will figure it out once you get the both of them off and laying side by side you will see exactly what needs to be done
 
S

StarFox07

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Aug 13, 2007
#5
  • Aug 13, 2007
  • #5
Will my stock throttle body work on it? I know its kind of pointless to upgrade my intake and run the stock TB but I dont have money for a new one yet.
 

the pony boy

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Aug 13, 2007
#6
  • Aug 13, 2007
  • #6
i had mine drilled and tapped for the stock act and egr coolant return line it cost me 40$ but made the swap very easy and everything was conntected in the stock locations. phil
 
2

2002BLGT

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Dec 18, 2003
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#7
  • Aug 13, 2007
  • #7
StarFox07 said:
Will my stock throttle body work on it? I know its kind of pointless to upgrade my intake and run the stock TB but I dont have money for a new one yet.
Click to expand...

yes it will , you need to carefully pull the studs out of the stock intake and use the stock EGR plate and TB .....
 
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StarFox07

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Aug 13, 2007
#8
  • Aug 13, 2007
  • #8
the pony boy said:
i had mine drilled and tapped for the stock act and egr coolant return line it cost me 40$ but made the swap very easy and everything was conntected in the stock locations. phil
Click to expand...

If you remember, what are the sizes of each? (egr coolant and act) Also, cant the act function if its not even in the intake system. Like it would still work fine if it was just in a cool part of the engine bay? Not looking to do this, just wondering.
 

jrichker

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#9
  • Aug 14, 2007
  • #9
If you are not going to do it right, don't bother installing the intake manifold. The car may run worse after you finish. Poor quality work tells people a lot of negative things about your intelligence and ability. Do Quality Work!!!

The ACT & ECT both use a 3/8" NPT (national pipe thread). The ACT must go in the intake airflow to give you an accurate air/fuel ratio.

The instructions on how to install the ACT in the airbox are very simple and easy to do. You can buy a pigtail connector ACT plug from the auto parts store insted of taking the old one apart. Then you can extend the wires without a lot of sweat and effort. All the directions are in my post.

See http://fordfuelinjection.com/?p=7 for how to solder like a pro, a must read for anyone doing electrical work on a car.
 
S

StarFox07

New Member
Jun 10, 2005
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Texas
Aug 14, 2007
#10
  • Aug 14, 2007
  • #10
jrichker said:
If you are not going to do it right, don't bother installing the intake manifold. The car may run worse after you finish. Poor quality work tells people a lot of negative things about your intelligence and ability. Do Quality Work!!!

The ACT & ECT both use a 3/8" NPT (national pipe thread). The ACT must go in the intake airflow to give you an accurate air/fuel ratio.

The instructions on how to install the ACT in the airbox are very simple and easy to do. You can buy a pigtail connector ACT plug from the auto parts store insted of taking the old one apart. Then you can extend the wires without a lot of sweat and effort. All the directions are in my post.

See http://fordfuelinjection.com/?p=7 for how to solder like a pro, a must read for anyone doing electrical work on a car.
Click to expand...

I dont have my factory airbox though, just a cai. I would prefer to drill/tap my lower for the two sensors.
 

the pony boy

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Apr 19, 2002
358
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10512
Aug 14, 2007
#11
  • Aug 14, 2007
  • #11
i just brought the intake to the machine shop with the sensor and the fitting and marked the intake where i wanted the holes. phil
 
S

StarFox07

New Member
Jun 10, 2005
71
0
0
Texas
Aug 14, 2007
#12
  • Aug 14, 2007
  • #12
the pony boy said:
i just brought the intake to the machine shop with the sensor and the fitting and marked the intake where i wanted the holes. phil
Click to expand...

K thats what i'll do
 

tmoss

Gettin Wired
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Jun 28, 2001
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Aug 15, 2007
#13
  • Aug 15, 2007
  • #13
If you have or can borrow a 9/16' drill bit (necked down to 1/2" to fit in a 1/2" drill) and the 3/8" NPT tap you can do it yourself.
 
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