you need to read the "willit" threads from ron (namba 209) for all your answers BUT read this first
http://www.opelgt.com/forums/news/22...-namba209.html
and ask questions accordingly
I see tons of talk about the 2.8, 3.1 and 3.4 V6 engine and 5 speed manual tranny swap and am entertaining the idea for my GT. In the interest of saving time, frustration and money, can one of the experts take the time to put together a comprehensive list of donor vehicles and the parts to get?
Is a longitudinal engine (RWD) the only style that will work?
I've checked out wiki GM 60-Degree V6 engine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia and this list is great. Love the equipped vehicle and hp info. But after the Gen I discussion, its unclear which engines are longitudinal.
The 60 degree V6 website 60ºV6 Family Tree - 60DegreeV6.com speaks to engine models, feature changes and output, but not to equipped models. Nor does it mention engine models.
Doug
you need to read the "willit" threads from ron (namba 209) for all your answers BUT read this first
http://www.opelgt.com/forums/news/22...-namba209.html
and ask questions accordingly
Copyright © 2003-2010 barry williams
All Rights Reserved
B.O.O.B. founding member
You will need an engine from a Camaro/Firebird or an S-10 truck. You also want the transmission from a Camaro/Firebird since they have better ratios and the shifter is in a position which is closer to stock.
I have done this swap many times until I got to the point of doing the work in just one weekend. I developed a special set of headers made for the GT and you use High Energy Ignition's chevy doughnut style motor mounts.
If you want a performance crate engine, like the one's we use, check out this site:
A.R.I. Engines GM 60-degree V6 - History & Information
A standard crate engine comes with 135HP and 160Lbs of torque, more than enough for an Opel. You can also go all out with a 3.8L but that requires a bit more work.
Just take a look at my animal.
http://www.opelgt.com/forums/6b-cool...tml#post184995
JB
Restore, Customize and Conquer!!!
'73 Opel GT Convertible "Stealth"
'70 Opel GT - 4 speed "Lucy"
'72 Opel GT - 4.0L V6 automatic "Animal"
'72 Opel Ascona 1900 "Junk Yard Dog"
'71 Opel Manta Automatic "Coco"
'72 Pontiac Ventura II SD455 "Monster"
'07 GMC Sierra 1500 - Daily driver
Baz
Thanks for the info but what I didn't want to do (and with respect to the awesome Namba 209) was wade through years of posts and threads.
I want the info in a nutshell but more info than blancojp - although his post is a great start.
2.8, 3.1 or 3.4 from X year Chevy Camaro, firebird or S-10,
Tranny from X year Camaro or Firebird for best gearing but need the tail housing from ?
Clutch from ?
Drive shaft/torque tube from?
What do I need to adapt the chevy tranny to Opel axle?
Someone has to have this down to a science!
BTW blancojp - If I'm going to go through the expense, time and pain in the butt to install a V-6 i'm going to have to have more ponies than 135! I'm thinking more near 200!
Thanks for the post, but if you have more info I would like to see it.
Doug
In have done over 10 conversions using the 2.8L or the 3.1L but I like the stroker 3.4L engine the best. At 135HP, the GT has a power to weight ratio of 16lbs/hp; which is very close to that of an LS1 Corvette.
1) You can use any 60 degree V6 from any year as long as it is rear wheel drive. You take the existing motor crossmember and cut the center section off so the oil pan fits. You will also need my headers since otherwise you will have a space problem. If the engine has a distributor then you will need to modify the wiper channel to have access to the distributor for service.
2) You can use any T5 transmission from either a camaro or firebird. The S-10 gear box has a high ratio on first gear making it unusable. The tranny crossmember is just a bar across with a poly GM mount.
3) You will need an Opel driveshaft and replace the Opel transmision yoke with a T5 yoke.
4) If you are going over 150HP and over 6000Rpm's, you will need new brakes, poly bushings all around and a new rear end. You can install an S-10 GU-06 unit which has posi and also requires a camaro torque bar adapted. You will then use a shortened and balanced S-10 driveshaft to complete the install. Opels have a three link rear suspension system and most cars have a 4 link. This means there will be no twisting on the body due to exceding torque therefore the body is nimble.
And if you decide to go with Fuel Injection, rewire the car using a new style fuse block, make sure you get the ECU and all wiring from the car you got the engine from, have the ECU reprogrammed and add a MAP module.
The list goes on and on so I believe this will give you a good primer where to start.
I hope this helps!
JB
Restore, Customize and Conquer!!!
'73 Opel GT Convertible "Stealth"
'70 Opel GT - 4 speed "Lucy"
'72 Opel GT - 4.0L V6 automatic "Animal"
'72 Opel Ascona 1900 "Junk Yard Dog"
'71 Opel Manta Automatic "Coco"
'72 Pontiac Ventura II SD455 "Monster"
'07 GMC Sierra 1500 - Daily driver
Namba209's V6 conversion is summarized in six phases here: Performance Articles - The Classic Opel Forums
Let's try and put this another way.
You want to go fast? How much money do you have?
We can set you up with a monster motor for only six figures. With an V-6 only in the fives.
Now the fours can make 130 RW much cheaper and are tons more fun to drive on a twisting road.
Just my thoughts
Last edited by wrench459; 09-20-2009 at 10:47 PM.
Tinkering is my name..fun is the game
This and that
Gary - Namba209 never says what his donor vehicles are and what he used from each vehicle...
And Wrench 459 - That is what I am trying to figure out... My target is ~200hp. Now I need to shop my local market to see what I can afford. Need to know the donor vehicles and what I need off them.
So far it looks like the 93 - 95 camaro or firebird is the best to start with due to transmission gearing better than S-10s. In my market (St Louis) there are a few $400 - $500 dollar camaros...
get it out of my driveway tonight
95 camaro runs but bad body damage. good engine and tranny
1992 chevy camaro
there are more expensive but in better shape donors
MUST SELL-1994 chevy camaro-127xxx mi-5spd-6cyl
Am I on the right track with these vehicles realizing they do need work before transplant?
Doug
Wrench, the V6 is about the same weight as the 1.9L so the front suspension will not suffer, performance and driveability should remain the same.
Here is the following tranny data:
TRANSMISSION GEAR RATIOS COMPARISON
GM T-5 Standard V8 / GM T-5 Standard S-10 / GM T-5 Optional
Max torque 275 lb ft / Max torque 225 lb ft / Max torque 300 lb ft
1ST - 2.95:1 / 3.97:1 / 3.35:1
2ND - 1.94:1 / 2.34:1 / 1.99:1
3RD - 1.34:1 / 1.46:1 / 1.33:1
4TH - 1.00:1 / 1.00:1 / 1.00:1
5TH - 0.73:1 / 0.79:1 / 0.68:1
There are optional 5th gear ratios that are matched to the final gear ratio on the optional T-5 as found on the Extreme or SS models. Information taken from How to Tune and Modify Your Camero 1982-1998 By Jason Scoot.
The problem is the torque tube shaft which destroys itself after 6000Rpms. With higher HP there is the possibility of higher Rpms in the final drive therefore the rear end must be revised.
And it isbetter if you get the complete car, that way you will have the ECU and the wiring if it is fuel injected.
JB
Restore, Customize and Conquer!!!
'73 Opel GT Convertible "Stealth"
'70 Opel GT - 4 speed "Lucy"
'72 Opel GT - 4.0L V6 automatic "Animal"
'72 Opel Ascona 1900 "Junk Yard Dog"
'71 Opel Manta Automatic "Coco"
'72 Pontiac Ventura II SD455 "Monster"
'07 GMC Sierra 1500 - Daily driver
How about this 3.6 V6 w/ a six speed manual out of a caddy?
2005 WHITE Cadillac CTS
Doug
going to rip a gt apart with that one , only thing you would keep would be the skin every thing else would need changing from the rockers down , rear end would die so would need new , front end would need new to carry it and weight up front would make the poor thing handle like a greasy pig
if all you want is fast in a straight line it would be fine but at the first corner slow to 10 mph at most lol
i was going to put a 300 bhp V12 in mine but to do it i was going to remove the body from the rockers up and drop it onto the floor pan of the donor so every thing was a matched set from wheel to wheel
the opel sigma layout might work doing that but we always advise to use a donor gt ( only good for body parts [skin] )to work with on these as its a shame to lose a good one to a project that could end up as junk when cash and talent run out
btw as we dont know your skills level whats your budget for the project , $ 25 -30000 is what i worked out i would need if i could not do it all on my own and had to pay to get it done professionally and that was scrimping on most of the work
Last edited by baz; 09-21-2009 at 10:39 PM.
Copyright © 2003-2010 barry williams
All Rights Reserved
B.O.O.B. founding member
Wow, Is the 3.6 that much different than a 3.4? Is the 3.6 a different block?
I looked up the 3.6 and the 6-speed on a car parts site and they are running about $3,000 and $1,500 respectively. I know I would need more parts than just the engine and tranny off the car tho.
I do have some mechanical skills but haven't turned a wrench professionally or in depth as a hobby in decades. Yeah, I know ... lots has changed. I lost interest for a while but am finding the idea of modernizing my GT appealing.
V-12 from what? Viper? Jag?
Thanks for the info Baz.
Doug
The CTS 3.6 is a totally different engine. DOHC vs push-rod OHV, 4 valves per cylinder vs two, and much more. About the only similarity I can see in the documentation is that they are both 60 degree vee's (although the first generation CTS 3.2 was the older Opel 54 degree V6)
Baz is from England, and the V-12 was from a Jag (XJ-S IIRC). And Vipers are V-10's, FWIW.
HTH
Keith Wilford
working on my '71 GT and '75 SportWagon
JB
Restore, Customize and Conquer!!!
'73 Opel GT Convertible "Stealth"
'70 Opel GT - 4 speed "Lucy"
'72 Opel GT - 4.0L V6 automatic "Animal"
'72 Opel Ascona 1900 "Junk Yard Dog"
'71 Opel Manta Automatic "Coco"
'72 Pontiac Ventura II SD455 "Monster"
'07 GMC Sierra 1500 - Daily driver
I was wondering if the aluminum headed FWD motor will fit with the starter on the drivers side. Can you move the starter motor to the opposite side of the engine like they do when they put a RWD engine in a Fiero? Juan, have you ever used a FWD engine? I have a line on a 3.4 out of 2000 Pontiac Gran Am. Gen III with bigger valves and larger injectors for $150.00.
JB
Restore, Customize and Conquer!!!
'73 Opel GT Convertible "Stealth"
'70 Opel GT - 4 speed "Lucy"
'72 Opel GT - 4.0L V6 automatic "Animal"
'72 Opel Ascona 1900 "Junk Yard Dog"
'71 Opel Manta Automatic "Coco"
'72 Pontiac Ventura II SD455 "Monster"
'07 GMC Sierra 1500 - Daily driver
Last edited by wrench459; 10-01-2009 at 10:22 PM.
Tinkering is my name..fun is the game
This and that
JB
Restore, Customize and Conquer!!!
'73 Opel GT Convertible "Stealth"
'70 Opel GT - 4 speed "Lucy"
'72 Opel GT - 4.0L V6 automatic "Animal"
'72 Opel Ascona 1900 "Junk Yard Dog"
'71 Opel Manta Automatic "Coco"
'72 Pontiac Ventura II SD455 "Monster"
'07 GMC Sierra 1500 - Daily driver
Blanco
Realizing the year Camaro/Firebird we are theoretically using for a donor (93-95), don't most of these come with A/C?
My GT has A/C. Any idea if they are compatible systems?
Does the compressor stay after one of your conversions? Or do you do an alternate drive belt routing?
I saw the pics of your install and it looks great. Probably a little too close to the left inner fender for my Frigidaire A/C compressor. Its so big it takes up half the eng compartment!
The a/c hasn't worked since I bought the gt in 1995, but it sure would be nice!
Doug
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