the 3100/3400 used a mount bolted directly to the bottom of the cast aluminum oil pan, im sure the 3900 is similar.
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3900 versions and configurations for swap use
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Have any pics?Current:
\'87 Fiero GT: 12.86@106 - too dam many valves; ran 12.94 @ 112 on new engine, then broke a CV joint
\'88 Fiero Formula: slow and attention getting; LZ8 followed by LLT power forthcoming
\'88 BMW 325iX: The penultimate driving machine awaiting a heart transplant
Gone, mostly forgotten:
\'90 Pontiac 6000 SE AWD: slow but invisible
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Originally posted by sharkey View Postthe 3100/3400 used a mount bolted directly to the bottom of the cast aluminum oil pan, im sure the 3900 is similar.
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Cool. Thanks!
If the hole in the front of the block is present, but not in quite the same place, I can modify the bracket to work. If the hole on the side of the block is gone, I'll have to think of another way to stabilize the bracket. The '88 brackets are thinner than the early brackets and already occasionally have problems cracking.
I saw from Joseph Upson's thread that the holes on the opposite side of the block are still there, so that's good.
It may make more sense just to fab a bracket that connects the mount holes on the pan to the Fiero engine mount.Current:
\'87 Fiero GT: 12.86@106 - too dam many valves; ran 12.94 @ 112 on new engine, then broke a CV joint
\'88 Fiero Formula: slow and attention getting; LZ8 followed by LLT power forthcoming
\'88 BMW 325iX: The penultimate driving machine awaiting a heart transplant
Gone, mostly forgotten:
\'90 Pontiac 6000 SE AWD: slow but invisible
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The holes in the other side of the block are in a different location than the gen1 2.8. IIRC two of the holes are the right location but the bolt bosses are actually taller, putting that mounting point farther out from the center line.
You'll probably be better off making a new bracket, or utilizing the gen3+ mount that attaches to the oil pan.
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Awesome. Thanks!Current:
\'87 Fiero GT: 12.86@106 - too dam many valves; ran 12.94 @ 112 on new engine, then broke a CV joint
\'88 Fiero Formula: slow and attention getting; LZ8 followed by LLT power forthcoming
\'88 BMW 325iX: The penultimate driving machine awaiting a heart transplant
Gone, mostly forgotten:
\'90 Pontiac 6000 SE AWD: slow but invisible
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The Shaun inspired me with this: http://www.realfierotech.com/viewtop...156968#p156968
So I looked up the PN for the OE engine mount bracket that goes with the LZ4/LZ9 (and LX9?) oil pan.
Here it is:
It *LOOKS LIKE* it might just drop onto the stock Fiero mount with little to no modification. I don't know if it would place the engine higher or lower than the original Fiero bracket/location, though. I guess I'll have to quick jaw jacking and find out.
Current:
\'87 Fiero GT: 12.86@106 - too dam many valves; ran 12.94 @ 112 on new engine, then broke a CV joint
\'88 Fiero Formula: slow and attention getting; LZ8 followed by LLT power forthcoming
\'88 BMW 325iX: The penultimate driving machine awaiting a heart transplant
Gone, mostly forgotten:
\'90 Pontiac 6000 SE AWD: slow but invisible
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Originally posted by Will'sFiero View PostThe Shaun inspired me with this: http://www.realfierotech.com/viewtop...156968#p156968
So I looked up the PN for the OE engine mount bracket that goes with the LZ4/LZ9 (and LX9?) oil pan.
Here it is:
It *LOOKS LIKE* it might just drop onto the stock Fiero mount with little to no modification. I don't know if it would place the engine higher or lower than the original Fiero bracket/location, though. I guess I'll have to quick jaw jacking and find out.
The Buick Rendezvous was available with both the High Value and High Feature V6's in the same year. Both engines used the same rubber mount. The 10216970 bracket shown before is for the pushrod, but there are two different versions of the bracket for the 3.6: 10334474 & 10331334. I have one of each on the way for investigation. Depending on how difficult these are to adapt to the Fiero cradle, this could be a nearly bolt-in swap for a high feature V6.
10216970 2005-2007 3.4/3.5
10334474 2005-2006 AWD 3.6
10331334 2004 AWD 3.6Current:
\'87 Fiero GT: 12.86@106 - too dam many valves; ran 12.94 @ 112 on new engine, then broke a CV joint
\'88 Fiero Formula: slow and attention getting; LZ8 followed by LLT power forthcoming
\'88 BMW 325iX: The penultimate driving machine awaiting a heart transplant
Gone, mostly forgotten:
\'90 Pontiac 6000 SE AWD: slow but invisible
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