Well I am on the lookout for a new vehicle for offroad and camping use. I have narrowed my search to an 88 to 91 Isuzu Trooper. It has a rear axle stronger than a D44 and is a dropout style axle which also makes it a full floater. The front is IFS which I actually prefer since I will be logging more road miles than off road. But the center section is an iron case and is also a dropout style which makes it far stronger than what came in the S-10's. The trooper is also large enough to haul my camping junk inside keeping it dry and also let me sleep inside so I don't have to pack a tent. And the best thing of all the Trooper packs a 2.8L Chev V6.
So with my search narrowed here are my plans. I got a location on one with a great body but tired, yet still running, engine. So the price is a very reasonable $850. I have a 3.1L crank in my shed than came out of my buddies old 3.1L Cavalier. So I plan to stroke it and overbore it. That should get me up to a 3.2L. The cam will be a stump puller. Something with a 500 to 4500RPM range. The iron heads will stay on with just a gasket match. The TBI will also stay but will be upgraded to 4.3L size. The slightly larger engine should just require a boost in fuel pressure. But if someone has the ability to do some calculations on fuel requirements I would be interested. I run 4.3L injectors on my current 3.4L and I can wind it out to 5500RPM with no lean spots. However this is with lower than stock pressure. So I am thinking that a 3.2L with a low duration cam and a descent boost in fuel pressure on the stock injectors will be sufficient. The cam will require new springs of course and I am looking at some off the shelf LS1 springs. But in order to retain them I think I will need the COMP retainers designed to fit beehive springs to GM Vortec heads which used the older 11/32 stem size. Is anyone able to confirm this? Now with the new springs I will not be able to use the exhaust valve oil shield. Good riddance since the damn things add a good bit of weight to the retainer system. So is there a way to install a stem seal on the exhaust valve of the iron heads? I am thinking the material if the intake stem seal will not handle the heat. I thought at one time I read there was a Fel Pro seal for this application. Is anyone aware of such a beast?
I will have this engine torn apart from top to bottom so if anyone has some leads on cheep DOHC windage trays or any other goodies I will be glad to scoop them up. This will be a budget build with a very specific goal of big low end torque and reliability. I never want to be stranded off road
Hope you guys can shed some light on these questions. Thanks and remember iron heads will never die!!!
So with my search narrowed here are my plans. I got a location on one with a great body but tired, yet still running, engine. So the price is a very reasonable $850. I have a 3.1L crank in my shed than came out of my buddies old 3.1L Cavalier. So I plan to stroke it and overbore it. That should get me up to a 3.2L. The cam will be a stump puller. Something with a 500 to 4500RPM range. The iron heads will stay on with just a gasket match. The TBI will also stay but will be upgraded to 4.3L size. The slightly larger engine should just require a boost in fuel pressure. But if someone has the ability to do some calculations on fuel requirements I would be interested. I run 4.3L injectors on my current 3.4L and I can wind it out to 5500RPM with no lean spots. However this is with lower than stock pressure. So I am thinking that a 3.2L with a low duration cam and a descent boost in fuel pressure on the stock injectors will be sufficient. The cam will require new springs of course and I am looking at some off the shelf LS1 springs. But in order to retain them I think I will need the COMP retainers designed to fit beehive springs to GM Vortec heads which used the older 11/32 stem size. Is anyone able to confirm this? Now with the new springs I will not be able to use the exhaust valve oil shield. Good riddance since the damn things add a good bit of weight to the retainer system. So is there a way to install a stem seal on the exhaust valve of the iron heads? I am thinking the material if the intake stem seal will not handle the heat. I thought at one time I read there was a Fel Pro seal for this application. Is anyone aware of such a beast?
I will have this engine torn apart from top to bottom so if anyone has some leads on cheep DOHC windage trays or any other goodies I will be glad to scoop them up. This will be a budget build with a very specific goal of big low end torque and reliability. I never want to be stranded off road
Hope you guys can shed some light on these questions. Thanks and remember iron heads will never die!!!
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