Old
Car End Run
by
Eric Peters
EricPetersAutos.com
Ive written
before about peacefully finding alternative ways of doing things
that makes it possible to avoid the edicts of oppressive government.
Heres a way to do that on four wheels: Update an older car
with a few key pieces of modern technology electronic fuel
injection and an overdrive transmission. Youll get most of
the important perks of a modern car including the modern
cars everyday driveability and fuel economy without
the modern cars high cost (including associated costs such
as insurance and property taxes, which are based on the cars
average retail value), its nannyism (air bags, belt-minder
buzzers, GPS, black boxes, etc.) and lack of personality.
Its a
great way to do an end-run around Big Brother without giving
up decent gas mileage, a car that starts easily (even in the dead
of winter) and works as well on the highway as it does trundling
around town.
First, fuel
injection (EFI):
Carburetors
have a number of virtues, including low cost, but they dont
include set-it-and-forget-it operation (nearly maintenance-free)
or automatic/instantaneous adjustment of air-fuel ratios for optimum
performance and economy under all driving conditions cold
or hot, high elevation or sea level, full-throttle or just cruising
along. EFI does all those things for you which improves both
driveability and gas mileage (as well as lowers emissions, especially
at cold start) which is why carburetors were retired in the late
1980s more than 25 years ago.
One can usually
adapt EFI to a car originally fitted with a carburetor in a Saturday
afternoon and get all these same benefits, but without Big Brother
riding shotgun.
Aftermarket
companies such as Edelbrock
sell bolt on EFI (typically, a throttle body that you simply drop
in place of the carb on the original intake manifold) systems that
come with everything you need to update your cars fuel delivery
system.
If you are
handy enough to remove/install a water pump, you have the basic
skills necessary to do the job.
The cost of
converting to EFI is typically around $1,500 or so for a complete,
ready to run system. Its not inexpensive, but
put the price into context: Converting to EFI will cost the equivalent
of three or four typical monthly new car payments and then,
its paid off and begins paying for itself.
Your older
car will literally run like new. It will be much easier to start
(no more setting the choke, no more waiting for it to warm up),
more responsive (stalling, surging and other such problems associated
with carbs should disappear) and will no longer need yearly adjustments
like the formerly routine Fall and Spring tune-ups one needed to
get with a carbureted car because the air/fuel ratio will be ideal
at all times. That also means the plugs wont get fouled by
an over-rich mixture or burned up by one thats too
lean. Just like a modern car, you probably wont need to change
plugs more often than once every 50,000 miles or so.
You also ought
to see noticeably better gas mileage because EFI more thoroughly
atomizes the incoming gasoline and is much more precise in
terms of fuel metering than a carburetor.
If you drive
the car regularly, the fuel/tune-up savings alone could pay for
the cost of the conversion but the hassle youll save
yourself is priceless. Plus, youll get to drive a cool old
car instead of a boring new one.
Next up, overdrive
transmissions:
Older cars
especially muscle cars from the 60s and 70s
can really benefit from swapping in a modern overdrive transmission.
When new, these cars were hell on wheels 0-60. But they sucked if
you had to spend any time on the highway because the combination
of aggressive final drive gearing in the rear axle and a non-overdrive
transmission (with the final gear being 1-1?) meant that the
engine would typically be running at uncomfortably high RPM just
cruising along at normal highway speeds. V-8 muscle cars (and trucks
with low gearing for pulling) would be running 3,000-plus RPM at
55-60 mph. Even standard cars, without aggressive final gearing,
operated at much higher cruise RPM than a modern equivalent. Constant
high RPM operation kills a cars gas mileage and is
hard on the engine, too. It also makes driving the car on anything
other than lower speed secondary roads unpleasant, especially now
that highwayspeeds limits are often 70 MPH or higher.
Modern cars
all have overdrive transmissions.
The final overdrive
gear (typically about 25 percent lower than the 1-1? final
gear in a non-overdrive transmission) dramatically cuts down engine
RPMs in top gear, even when the car is a performance car and has
a very aggressive axle ratio for maximum off-the-line acceleration.
A new Corvette,
for example, can trundle along at 75 mph with its 500 hp V-8 barely
turning more than a fast idle (around 2,000 RPM thanks to its overdrive
transmission. It can also deliver nearly 30 mpg on the highway
only a few MPG behind many current-year four-cylinder economy cars.
In the 70s,
muscle cars with half or less the current Corvettes horsepower
werent out of the teens on the highway
mainly because they didnt have overdrives and their engines
were running at 60-70 percent of redline just keeping up with the
flow traffic.
As with EFI,
it is fairly easy to adapt a modern overdrive transmission to virtually
any older vehicle/engine Some are easier to do than others, but
transmissions (and kits) are readily available new/rebuilt and ready
to go from companies such as TCI,
B&M, Phoenix
Transmissions and many others. You could also pull the appropriate
unit from a parts car in a salvage yard. (A little research will
tell you what fits what.)
A new/rebuilt
OD transmission will cost you anywhere from about $1,000 or so on
the low end to $2,000 or more on the high end for a super-duty performance
unit, such as a Tremec five or six speed.
The installation
is more physically challenging than swapping in EFI, but even if
you pay someone to do it for you, the end results are nothing short
of spectacular. I know, because Ive done this swap myself.
Though I still
have a carburetor feeding my 1976 Trans-Ams engine (mainly
because it is not a daily driver and so I can comfortably live with
a carb) I did install a modern overdrive transmission (2004R)
in it. Even with very aggressive 3.90 rear axle gears, the big 455
V-8 now only turns around 2,200 rpm at 70-plus MPH versus 3,000-plus
at the same road speed with the original, non-overdrive transmission.
Gas mileage
has increased to reasonable (close to 20 on the highway) from catastrophic
(single digits).
I could (and
do) drive the car anywhere, including extended highway trips.
It is as comfortable
to drive now as a new Corvette only better because
its free of air bags, DRLs, OnStar monitoring and all the
rest of it. Plus, it did not cost me $50,000 and (trust me) the
cost to insure it (and pay the taxes on it) is a fraction of what
Id be facing had I bought a new Corvette instead.
But best of
all, Big Brother is not my co-pilot.
What could
be better than that?
Reprinted
with permission from EricPetersAutos.com.
October
31, 2011
Eric Peters
[send him mail] is an automotive
columnist and author of Automotive
Atrocities and Road Hogs (2011). Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Eric Peters
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