*Bringing this back alive
My 85 K10 has been dead in the drive way since november now. Rings are....gone probably lol and i don't have a garage or anywhere indoors to work on her.
My original plan was to pull a 350 out of a 1987 C20. Claimed to have been rebuilt with under 10k miles on it. Swap the intake for a an edelbrock 3706 and keep my qjet and vac lines. Easy, $150-$200 for intake, no electronics still.
Further thought of reliability and MPGs has made me think of keeping the engine as is, TBI.
Question:
Besides the actual engine swap, what else would need done?
Sensors? ECM? All new Wiring Harness (I already assume this)? Dash Cluster?
Worth it or not? I'm trying to keep this low budget.
If your 85 had cruise control, and you still have the VSS in the cluster, you are good to go.
First thing, Check PA's engine change laws...I dont know if you need to have it inspected and certified after the swap.
Do not tell them it was put of a 3/4 ton....they wont be able to tell otherwise.
I recommend an inline fuel pump back near the tank. I think I have a pic of my fuel pump somewhere, I will look for it.
Get some aluminum 3/8 fuel line for the return line, and have a 3/8 nipple welded into your fuel filler pipe to attach it to. The return line on the 85 is not big enough, and I think may have a restrictor in the sender. Even better if you can get the 87 tank, then you can just swap it in, but still run the 3/8 return line to the tank.
worth it? In my opinion, yes. easier starts, no choke to mess with, which is important in your neck of the woods.
If you are good with wiring, the harness is super easy to modify, but if not, the Howell harness is the way to go, and they can also provide the proper ECM if you need it. Those 2 items will be the most expensive parts, assuming you have all the hardware from the 87.
On the flip side, Like I told Imann, you can stay carbed, and get that manifold that I mentioned, with no other issues to work out, and still get excellent results.
If you do stay carbed, I would highly recommend staying with the thermostatic air cleaner setup, and make certain that the choke operates smoth, and is adjusted properly. I recommend an 1100 RPM cold idle. The stock air cleaner is also the best cold ait intake you can get, as long as it is still plumbed into the intake horn beside the radiator.
Also, you will need that 87 engine to be complete, from the ballancer to the flywheel. It may not have the mechanical fuel pump provision, so you may need an electric pump.