child9
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Austin, TX
Dunno, but what I now know is I will in fact require a Toyota shifter.... Damn it.
I'm lovin' this build. Any reason you wouldn't leave the front of your "scoop" open, just for air flow to cool the engine compartment? You could do some subtle fender vents to let out some heat, or open up the fire wall just below the cowl, and let the heat out of the cowl vents (you'd have to make the passenger side functional).
Depending on what look you're going for, I think a tube bumper, based on something like this, without the winch, but with a "chin" guard for the IC would be functional, and somewhat hide the fact the you have a giant IC on your ride.
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If you're keeping everything black, which I think will look great, it should blend in, somewhat.
Steve
If only I had another t-case and axle upgrade, (hell, another 35 would be ok) on retainer...I'd be a LOT more willing to just smash the petal to the floor when she's on the dyno to see what happens.
or check out my other videos on the cobra, and other cool stuff. www.youtube.com/cobra96svt570 :laugh3:P.S This is just a post on some of the axle threads i read previoulsy in this thread., and wanted to share my personal experinece with what I have used in previous builds.
Its jsut my personal experience, and real life actions.
I scrolled thru as many pages as i could till i got dizzy, and I noticed alot of ppl saying the dana's will bloe apart. When actually they are very strong, as long as you dont run 33's and try to do rollbacks and drifts with, theyll hold up fine with those small supra rims for a while.
I had a juced up 6psi 4.0, with some mustang GT rims with low prows and a posi trac. It held up fine, un till the spiders tor apart a year later.
Now the best option, find a rear axle setup out of a 96-98 cobra, factory posi-trac, 8.8, with the 31-spline axles, and factory cobra 11.65 disc & calipers, and it will hold up to 400hp easy..
Or throw a detroit tru-tac locker with the worm gera setup, and solves you clutch ware and removes the spiders, which wil then support as much as you can throw at it. I had a 96 cobra fully built with 490hp single t70 & 14psi.
And the car seen lots of abuse in drifting tournaments and autcross, and never had a problem. Plus its still streetable.
So go with a good 8.8, built up, cutthe brackets off, weld up leaf perches and there you go. It can even be a 8.8 out of a lincoln or explore, just add some upgrads i stated, and weld perches and your good to up to 500hp +
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heres a video of my built 8.8 I had in the cobra testing it out Before the turbo, but still pushin almost 400hp with boltons,aftermarket standalone and other stuff i didnt list in the decription. but it wasnt boosted at the time.But this is the same axle setup I put in and xj later on.
This is why I will take and 8.8 over any other rear for street performance. A dana 44-60 is made for offroad IMO, meanwhile and 8.8 is the beast on the street, but also good in the woods. Cheap parts, easy to build, and you can find and 8.8 in just about any ford. just some are beter then others.
The best 8.8s are in cobras, certain #r'd hi-end GTs, and some explorers with offroad/tow packages. just look around! plus there cheap.
Even if you get a 96-98 cobra 8.8 thats shot, rebuild it for about 500$ and you got a ver strong rear.especially if you ass gussets and strength suports. If your running over 35's, go for a D44, but a 60 would be best, or a GM 12-14bolt.
enjoy the stealthy 8.8 in action: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pgJ7spwrJyQ