Would this also be true of the AMC 2.5L?Jim Blair, Kirkland, WA '87 Comanche, '83 Jeep J10, '84 Jeep J10, '73 J4000 (RIP)<br>
Frank wrote: 3. There is a good alternative engine -- a late model Ford 200 or 250 (the tall deck 200, made through the late 80s, not related to the 300). Those sixes are short enough and narrow enough to all but drop right in. You'll need to fabricate engine mounts, but that's easier than cutting a car up to put in a late model AMC six. At least with the Ford engine you can go back original later if desired. This is one non-AMC swap that most would accept. The 195.6 was a great engine for its day, but it's to hard to find parts for and expensive to rebuild for a driver. If you really want to drive your early American a lot, this is about the only way to go without cutting under the hood. Even modern fours are too wide -- the intake sticks way out from the engine, requiring one of the "humps" to be cut out. _________________________________________________________________It?s the Windows Live? Hotmail® you love ? on your phone! http://www.windowsmobile.com/hotmailmobile?ocid=MobileHMTagline_2
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