if the V8 in question is a 454........i guess it should be acceptable.....
Hi , I have a quick question to those who have put a holden V8 in your Rangie. My mate is thinking about trying to put one in his 83 RR and is wondering if its worth it and what would be the good and bad points in doing so. So I figured I would post the question here and see what thoughts and ideas come from this. And yes we are aware it is morally wrong in doing such a conversion but its a thought that needs to be discussed before doing an overhaul on his tired 3.9.
Thanks for your thoughts.......B
if the V8 in question is a 454........i guess it should be acceptable.....
Sabatage!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Aren't holden v8 engines prone to breaking as much as the original? Positives are: they are in abundance and probably will get a lot cheaper with current fuel prices if money is no object. Why not go all out and get a crate HEMI or a nice reliable turbo diesel?
I would like to see a 454 in a RR, some how I dont think the diff could handle it though. I wonder how a V6 or a late model six from a Ford would go? Personally I think stick with the RR engine. we are interested in knowing how the extra weight and horsepower change the way the car handles etc..........
A ford six won't fit, trust me i tried(have to move front crossmember or mod firewall), a holden V8 ahhh NO, but a ford V8????, Well i already have!
I have a SUPERCHARGED FORD V6 in my Rangie.
3.8 litre with 15lb boost .............it ****s on MOST Rover V8's
both off road and on economy aprox 8klm/litre
Last edited by kirk; 30th May 2006 at 10:07 AM.
I used to have a holden stroker in mine, 20 - 26l/100klm, thats why i pulled it and put in the desiel. An injected holden V8 would be good but not a carby model. The weight difference isnt to bad , its around 50kg
Last edited by Vern; 28th May 2006 at 05:42 PM.
HSV Rangie has one, just wait for Michael to chime in
An old mate had a business in Sydney in the late eighties doing the Holden V8 conversion, they reckoned it was a great swap.
If you are up for a new engine, then I would consider a Holden efi unit, depending on what price you can get it for. The motor is generally a better engine than the Rover (Buick) and parts are available all over Australia, even in remote locations. Rover parts are a little harder to get at times. I have found the Rover motor generally to be a great motor. Easy to repair and fairly reliable. The holden motor similar, but leaks less oil and generally is cheaper to get worked on. I would have either but if it was a choice would have a 5ltre Holden for practical reasons.
The Holden (Buick) V6 is basically the same motor as the Rover (Buick) V8 with just 2 cylinders lopped off and not all alloy. Compare the two if you ever get a chance.
A new in crate 5litre will cost about $6-7k with a new 4.6litre Rover about $12k. Do the math.
2011 Discovery 4 TDV6
2009 DRZ400E Suzuki
1956 & 1961 P4 Rover (project)
1976 SS Torana (project - all cash donations or parts accepted)
2003 WK Holden Statesman
Departed
2000 Defender Extreme: Shrek (but only to son)
84 RR (Gone) 97 Tdi Disco (Gone)
98 Ducati 900SS Gone & Missed
Facta Non Verba
Falcon 6 too long for Range Rover? Thats a shame. Yet they fit in series Landies without any serious modifications (changing sump buldge and oil pickup location I assume being one of them). You'd think thered be no great difference in engine bay lengths. Id love a Series 2a/3 with a pre X-Flow 250ci Falcon engine. They have so much low down torque and are extreemly easy to fix and tinker with. I spose an X-Flow one would also be good...just not as simple to fix in the field.
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