I ordered a few more parts today which will probably get here towards the end of the week. What I ordered:
- Meziere 55 GPM electric water pump
- Ford Racing 47 lb/hr fuel injectors
- Lug nuts
- Seat heaters
A bit of an odd combination, but the way that Summit has their current promotion/rebates tiered it made sense to maximize the dollars saved on purchases I was going to make anyway.
I'd been planning on the electric water pump for some time. This is one of my splurges that adds several hundred bucks vs. a standard variety belt-driven pump which works just fine, but it's something I've always been entertained by the concept of and that I want to use because of its ability to cool down the engine after shutting it off, provide maximum cooling even at idle, and also having one less belt-driven thing to hopefully increase the throttle response of the engine. I was going to wait a bit longer on doing this, but I've decided I need to order it now for a few reasons. For one I have to modify a timing cover for the timing gears and this will let me confirm which one I need to modify, and then it'll also let me start to look at confirming what size I need for my harmonic balancer and if I'm going to be able to run a timing wheel for EDIS as opposed to a distributor. My decision on the Meziere pump was one I thought about heavily as it costs about twice as much as basically all the other pumps available. It also flows 55 GPH instead of 35 GPH, which I figured would make a difference if I ever track the car, plus it gets hot here in Kansas. The Meziere electric pump is also the only one I was able to find that has ports to support a heater, which is important since I'm planning on that. So I figured it made sense.
For injectors I chose Ford Racing and the size for a few reasons. 47 lb-hr is significantly higher than I need (42 would be plenty, and 38 would probably be ideal). Price wise, the 47 lb-hr were actually cheaper for brand new ones and they came factory on one of the later Mustangs. This will give me enough capacity for essentially anything I want power wise going forward. And since they were cheaper than the smaller ones, no real reason to go smaller. Yes, there's a concern about idle quality, but on a 351 cubic inch (actually 358 cubic inches with the .040 overbore) engine, it'll be fine. I ran 450cc (so 42 lb-hr) injectors on my 3000GT VR-4 and it idled fine. Besides, a rough idle is acceptable.
Lug nuts, straightforward there.
The seat heaters just add the pads underneath the fabric as well as the switches, which they put on the side but may be better to relocate to the dashboard (I'll figure that one out). Those will help on chillier days and they're cheap at $35 each, just takes some extra labor to take the seat covers off and reinstall them.
The more I think about it, the more I want to go for EDIS for ignition. Technology wise, it matches the time period I'm going for, having been released in the early 90s and in production on the 5.0 in the late 90s. For a Y2K technology car with a 302/351 it's something that would've been used at that time. Plus the EDIS has a much stronger spark than standard distributors, allowing for a wider spark plug gap meaning better firing and should also help responsiveness and efficiency. Also the system is insanely reliable in my experience and provides infinitely adjustable ignition timing adjustments.
One negative at this point is that the newest EDIS vehicle is 20 years old now so finding good junkyard parts essentially doesn't happen. That's not a big deal since I'm trying to do as much as I can new anyway, but that does drive up some additional cost. Also it looks like on the 302s with EDIS the coils were mounted fairly high up, which may cause a hood interference issue and push me back towards a distributor. For now, I'm not ordering anything and just moving forward on putting the engine together one bit at a time.
My wife is back off to work tomorrow, so I'll try to finish up the brake and fuel lines while she's gone, as well as keep plugging away on the motor. I figure I'll put the oil pickup on and then start looking more into the oil pan while waiting on the water pump so I can do the timing cover bits. Once I get the timing cover and the oil pan on I may start attaching the bellhousing and other bits so I can get to where I can put the engine and transmission in the car. Also have some aluminum panels in the engine bay I can start riveting on.
My hope is that when my wife gets back from work we can bleed the brakes on the car and put the engine and transmission in, but we'll see.