Photo Pages:
http://community.webshots.com/album/45089872yuZmIa
http://community.webshots.com/album/44244553oFUsYh
http://community.webshots.com/album/46649628cceDvK
http://community.webshots.com/album/49356137QmEtHM
Part 1 (7-29-02)
After purchasing the Bullitt, I missed the boost surge I had from my previous
car. After some research, including joining the Incon list, TDC looked like the
only viable and available kit on the market for the 4.6 modular motor.
That said, I talked to the sales guy at the time and spec'd out the kit I
wanted. Essentially their Stage 2 Outlaw kit with the smaller stage 2 std 60-1
turbo. This gave me bigger injectors 42# vs 36#, bigger fuel pump 255L vs 190L,
and better grade wastegate. This way, I can always upgrade to a bigger turbo
later and everything else will be in place to support it.
They have a reputation for some lack of customer support and being slow to
deliver. So far it's true. I finally received the major part of my kit July
18th, almost 2 months late. The shipment was not complete and the
balance of the parts are shipping today, 7/25. On their defense, when you
do finally get to talk to Scott, he is a great help.
First impression is the parts are well made. The headers are very good, with
a very good hi temp ceramic coating. The major parts are done well. The
wastegate valve only came with a turn down dump tube. They are sending me parts
to route it back into the downpipe. This will require some fabrication and
welding, not a problem for me but for some who can only bolt things on, it is a
concern.
This is a tight fit system. It requires re-routing of the hydrobooster
hydraulic lines, 2 brake lines and a fuse box. Some wires will need to
be cut and lengthened. This install is not for the faint of heart. I
am installing a tube K member and Canton Race oil pan so having the K-member out
makes the install much, much easier. Install would be very tight indeed with the
K member in. The kit also provides motor mount spacers to raise the
engine. Actual parts installation in the next segment.
Part 2
(8-1-02)
This installment of the TDC install
covers some of the major parts fitment. This install will
take longer than a normal one as I am adding a D&D tubular K-member and coil overs, a Canton road race oil pan, SPA digital gauges,
Autometer gauge cluster, Oil
cooler, a better quality cooler for the power steering, and some of my own heat shielding, while I'm at
it. TDC supplies a
cooler for the power steering, but
I am installing a more efficient compact unit do to space constraints.
The headers went on fine. The drivers
side is more difficult to get at the nuts. I decided to use the factory studs with new factory self
locking nuts, rather than the supplied studs and nuts, which
were a bit smaller and may have
been easier to get at.. This would be quite a stinker if the stock k-member were in the car. Instructions say it's
doable though. The cross pipe
is mounted up temporarily until the
turbo and downpipe are put on, so pipes can be moved around as needed. The external wastegate nestles in nicely
in the right hand fender corner as
does the remote oil filter.
The relocation of the large fuse box,
where the turbo will reside, went well. It relocates to the
inner fender well on the drivers side. Ford was nice enough to have plugs on all the major wiring harnesses,
which made it a snap.
Only wiring that will require
modifying, will be the alternator wires and the O2 sensor wires, which will require lengthening. TDC
does not supply the
wiring extensions, so you are on
your own. I will buy some O2 harness extensions, readily available from various vendors. The alternator wiring
I am studying to see if I can avoid
cutting factory wiring.
The Brake lines were a job. You have to
relocate the proportioning valve. TDC supplies 2 custom bent
lines to extend the PV to hear the front of the car. You have to move and re-bend the factory lines back to the
new location. A tubing bender is a
must here. On the passenger side, you have to reroute all the brake lines over the frame rail to get them clear of the header on
that side. Again, a bender helps
here.
The hydraulic lines to the hydrobooster
for the brakes must be replaced and rerouted. TDC supplies all the lines and fittings to accomplish this. A
new water neck assembly is provided
to replace the factory one on the block to the lower radiator hose. It changes the angle as well as providing
ports for the remote filter. A steel U-pipe is provided and
you have to cut the factory
lower radiator hose and add in this
u-pipe to clear the left header and exhaust components. I may get some silicone hose for this instead
of cutting up the factory hose.
The oil pan has to have a hole put in
for the turbo drain. I plan to weld in a stainless fitting into
the Canton pan rather than punching a hole and trying to thread it as the instructions ask you to do. I
will be more confident in the
connection under road racing conditions.
Overall, the kit and placement of parts
has been well thought out by TDC. I have only had to drill one hole and part fitment and quality, so far, has
been very good. Next installment, we get the turbo in and the IC
mounted, I hope.
Part 3
(8-12-02)
Here is the link to pics for this weeks
install: http://community.webshots.com/album/46649628cceDvK
Round 3 of the TDC install includes
install of the D&D tubular K member and Canton road racing oil pan. I am
taking advantage of the car being apart to add these and coil overs, so all the
install is taking additional time..sorry.
Missing parts continue to plague the
installation of the kit. I discovered I'm missing more fittings to complete the
hook up of the power steering/brake booster hydraulics. One little fitting
really brings things to a halt. My screwup delayed getting the oil pan in
so I could install the k-member. I had ordered the wrong fitting for the turbo
drain that needed to be welded into the oil pan. The pan is in and the K-member
is in. Hoping for a lot more room with the tube k-member, to my dismay, the
right hand header touches the k-member, :-( Have to figure what I'm going
to do there.
I had to take off the short turbo inlet
pipe connected to the turbo. They just had a round hole in the flange into the
Garrett rectangular turbine inlet. This was cutting off about 30% of the opening
into the turbine. I ground out the flange to match the inlet. I hope to
bolt up the turbo and downpipe next weekend. Then it's to the myriad of details
including:
Fabricating the wastegate piping back
to the downpipe Finishing up all the wiring re-routing Finishing the
hydraulics including mounting PS cooler Installing coil overs Finishing
oil hose installation, filling with oil and priming Install chip on
EEC Finish routing battery cables Fixing clearance problems and making up
heat shields
Still missing: Cat converter High
temp steering boots Hydraulic fittings for the steering rack More to
come!
Part 4
(9/18/02)
Sorry for the delay in these postings.
Having to travel a lot and only really getting to work on the car a day and a
half a weekend slows things down. Let me say that on this kind of install, leave
yourself plenty of time to do it as problems will come up and bite you as you
will read below.
The car is assembled. There are a few
details I will go back and upgrade, but I wanted to get the car on the ground
for the Fun Ford Weekend in Ennis TX 9/20 and also the first annual
Bullitt National event.
The list of things to complete from
part 3 is done. I am STILL waiting for the catalytic converter, or the car is
going to Nationals with the straight pipe. The exhaust is set up for no cat, so
I will have to cut and weld the “Y” pipe to accept the cat. I plan on using
tri-clamps so the cat can be pulled quickly for racing yet be easy to R&R
and not leak. Tri-clamps are the only way to go.
Disaster loomed when I went to start
the car 2 weeks prior. Installing the chip on the EEC and starting the car
proved fruitless. The car would not run. Pull the chip and the car started right
up, coughed and belched a lot due to the 42# injectors, but ran. TDC promised to
send another chip, as soon as their broken chip burner was repaired. To date
(9-18-02) I have still not received the chip. In discussions with Dennis
Reinhart at Reinhart Automotive, I went to a backup plan and had him send me out
a Diablo chip. Plugged it in and the same symptoms and no starting as I had with
the Autologic chip from TDC. Now I am 4 days from having to leave for FFW, and
the car won’t run. We decided the code in the EEC was the culprit seeing 2 chips
showed the same problem. I had to FedX the EEC out for a reflash and hope to get
it back today and HOPE the car runs tonight.
Another modification that I made has to
do with the fuel pump. The Walbro that is supplied is not a direct fit in the
fuel pump can assembly, as it is taller and fatter. You have to modify the top
assembly. There have been arguments that the higher flow pump will overwhelm the
fuel pump assembly-can check valve, which allows fuel in to the pump in the
tank. The argument is the pump will flow more than the check valve can flow
under high HP applications, causing starvation. Steeda makes a twin fuel pump
assembly, but it requires modifying the fuel pump can as well and you have the
potential of starvation under cornering. Not good for a road racer like me. The
answer is the new Cobra fuel tank and pump. Ford factory makes a dual fuel pump
assembly for the Cobra which works perfectly for the EEC-V and the pulse width
modulation the EEC does with the fuel pump to modify fuel pressure. The
installation of the Cobra tank and pump is a direct bolt in to my Bullitt and I
would assume the GT as well.
The last installment will cover the
results, impressions, any last problems and opinion on the whole kit experience.
Final pictures will come as well.
Brian Hood
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