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9/03/2022 5:47 AM  #1


Something followed me home

Bought this for the tires. 

How hard would it be to take the discs off of the 8.8 and convert to my 9" with discs from an earlier crown vic conversion? I hate the crown vic discs because one of the park brakes constantly squeaks when going slow.


67 Coupe, 5.0 EEC IV Fuel injected. T5, 3:70 rear
 

9/03/2022 7:10 AM  #2


Re: Something followed me home

I started out going this route. The first issue I ran into was the difference in bolt patterns between my small bearing housing and the explorer backing plates. I’ve slept since then so any other issues have faded. I bought MS brackets and used the late model stuff.


John  -- 67 Mustang Coupe 390 5 speed
 

9/03/2022 7:38 AM  #3


Re: Something followed me home

Most would concur, I think, that he Explorer rear discs are a bad idea even on an Explorer axle. It is much easier to use the appropriate MustangSteve brackets and 1994-2022 rear discs from a Mustang

Hopefully it has a 5.0 v8 in it so you can get the engine.


Money you enjoy wasting is NOT wasted money... unless your wife finds out.
 

9/04/2022 10:45 AM  #4


Re: Something followed me home

Engine and 4R70W.


"you get what you pay for, good work isn't cheap, and there are NO free lunches...PERIOD!"
 

9/04/2022 11:25 AM  #5


Re: Something followed me home

not so lucky, has a 4.0 with 300,000 miles on it. Friend smoked a deer with it, so all i mainly salvaging is the tires. Deer took out the radiator, power steering  pump, and most of the front end.


67 Coupe, 5.0 EEC IV Fuel injected. T5, 3:70 rear
     Thread Starter
 

9/04/2022 8:57 PM  #6


Re: Something followed me home

Hopefully he got the back straps.😁

 

9/05/2022 6:37 AM  #7


Re: Something followed me home

I'd look to flip it.  That 4.0 will run forever.  Source the crash parts from a junkyard or Rock Auto.  Clean it up and put it on Marketplace, Craigslist, etc. for $4,500.  Still a sellers market with used cars. 

 

9/05/2022 4:41 PM  #8


Re: Something followed me home

$4,500 for that when an identical one not wrecked sells for $1,200?  One with a 5.0 and 4r70w running but with body damage goes for $500 or $1000 if a flipper gets to it first.

300,000 miles and no v8???  Yep, get the tires and melt down the rest. Maybe keep the rear end if you want to mess with an 8.8


Money you enjoy wasting is NOT wasted money... unless your wife finds out.
 

9/06/2022 5:22 AM  #9


Re: Something followed me home

Around here I'd put $4,500 on it and sell it for probably $3,000, maybe a bit less.  Markets are regional I realize, but any 4 door SUV here attracts, let's just call it a certain type of buyer, who pays cash and makes my ability to speak a second language useful.  My buddy just sold a reasonably rusty work van for $2,600.  Two years ago he'd have been lucky to get $1,000 for it.  260k on the clock. 

 

9/06/2022 7:29 AM  #10


Re: Something followed me home

Absolutely keep the 8.8 if you have the space.  Off-roaders use them a lot as do many old Ford types.  Should be easy to sell.  I bought one at a bone yard back in '13, paid $250, gotta be going for a bit more now. 


"you get what you pay for, good work isn't cheap, and there are NO free lunches...PERIOD!"
 

9/07/2022 8:45 AM  #11


Re: Something followed me home

Bullet Bob wrote:

Absolutely keep the 8.8 if you have the space.  Off-roaders use them a lot as do many old Ford types.  Should be easy to sell.  I bought one at a bone yard back in '13, paid $250, gotta be going for a bit more now. 

My thoughts also, at least keep the rear end.  That rear seems to be getting more popular today, the 9" rear is great, but not necessary for a street car.  


65 Fastback, 351W, 5-speed, 4 wheel discs, 9" rear,  R&C Front End.
 

9/07/2022 5:51 PM  #12


Re: Something followed me home

A stock 9"is overrated anyway, unless its one of the rare N case ones.  The 8.8" has almost as large a ring gear with better pinion bearing spacing meaning it doesn't need the pocket bearing.  I've seen a lot of 9" failures where the crush sleeve allowed an oscillation that allowed the bearings to bind and blew the side of the pocket bearing bore out of the case turning it, the bearings, and the gearset into junk.  You can get plenty strong 31 spline axles for the 8.8 too, though truck axles are typically already 31 spline.  I remember seeing Gary Rhoe run high 8's with an 8.8 that was still 4 lug in his '80 Mustang. 

 

9/07/2022 8:34 PM  #13


Re: Something followed me home

The 8.8 will come out and sit along side the extra 9" with the 2.79 gears i have.
i believe it is within a 1/4" of being the same width as the 9" in the car now. 


67 Coupe, 5.0 EEC IV Fuel injected. T5, 3:70 rear
     Thread Starter
 

9/07/2022 9:05 PM  #14


Re: Something followed me home

I'm still convinced that one of the rear axle engineers on the Explorer project was a first gen Mustang guy.  "Hmmm...if I offset that pinion about 3"...yeah, 2.875 will do...I can make that work in my early Mustang easily.  Disk brakes, limited slip, 31 spline axles with 5x4.5 lug spacing.  Yup, glad I got this assignment.  Lot cheaper than that 9" I was thinking about."


"you get what you pay for, good work isn't cheap, and there are NO free lunches...PERIOD!"
 

Board footera


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