I had that 2.5 in an Escape. It wasn’t great on MPG but I imagine it would be plenty fun in something light like the Miata and it was a very reliable engine. Never had any issues except a leaking valve cover gasket at like 130k miles lol.
Exactly! I'll be in about $3 to $4K with this swap. I'll post some of the fun bits I pickup on the way. And for the record, I deleted the expense column from my spreadsheet as sometimes it's better not to keep track of these things. LOLThink some folks are missing the point a little bit. The 2.0l > 2.5l swap requires very little custom work or parts, it's largely just mixing and matching OEM parts to fit the 2.5l variant of the same fundamental engine architecture. Not exactly drop-in, but not too far from it. Cost runs from $1k - $5k all in depending on if you're doing the labor yourself and how many performance parts you're doing at the same time.
Nope. Rigging up an ECU, fueling, etc... would be neat, but I don't have infrastructure outside the car to make that happen. Going to install the 2.5, pray, and turn the key.Your “new” 2.5 looks clean. Have you had to resist the urge to “start it” on the stand?
Shhhhhhh! Don't tell my wife...already in my long-term plans.....Someone has to say it, hang a turbo on that thing.
looks like the weight adds a massive amount of negative camber. Or maybe you need that to actually turn it with all that weight.Coffin on wheels!Yeah, I'd love to test drive a Miata with a V8.
You might be surprised. Flyin' Miata states that the typical LSx swap adds about 180 lbs, with 120 lbs over the front wheels and 60 lbs over the back. F/R balance is changed by only a few percentage points.looks like the weight adds a massive amount of negative camber. Or maybe you need that to actually turn it with all that weight.
You might be surprised. Flyin' Miata states that the typical LSx swap adds about 180 lbs, with 120 lbs over the front wheels and 60 lbs over the back. F/R balance is changed by only a few percentage points.
And @tcp71You might be surprised. Flyin' Miata states that the typical LSx swap adds about 180 lbs, with 120 lbs over the front wheels and 60 lbs over the back. F/R balance is changed by only a few percentage points.
Indeed. For the swap, I need to use the oil pan from the 2.0 to clear the cross member. With the 2.0 oil pan, the balance shaft assembly simply won't fit. I'll be using a Fluidampr harmonic balancer to help mitigate vibration.Losing the balance cartridge is a bummer. Large 4 bangers shake a fair bit. Oh well. Keep going...
I think you'll find its a nice pulling 3k-6k rpm engine and revving it up to where the balance shafts really help, isn't going to be needed, as these don't have VVT? My 2.0 in the Focus has no VVT either, and in brisk driving, shifting at 6k or a bit after is fine.Indeed. For the swap, I need to use the oil pan from the 2.0 to clear the cross member. With the 2.0 oil pan, the balance shaft assembly simply won't fit. I'll be using a Fluidampr harmonic balancer to help mitigate vibration.
I think you'll find its a nice pulling 3k-6k rpm engine and revving it up to where the balance shafts really help, isn't going to be needed, as these don't have VVT? My 2.0 in the Focus has no VVT either, and in brisk driving, shifting at 6k or a bit after is fine.
This is the one miata swap/upgrade I've never seen run or been in, but I think its probably the best choice for a little more grunt while keeping it still like a regular miata. I've seen a FC RX-7 transformed into a really fun autocross car when he swapped the rotary for a 2.4 ecotec, and gave it enough torque to make the car steerable with power, but not hard to drive.
The LS swap needs a ton of work to the rest of the car, and is tricky to sort it all out, to get it back to handling as good as it was, and is a handful to drive quickly, and always looking to send you into the ditch. But if you want a reliable 300+hp car, its probably the best option, if you have the time and money to get it working right.
The supercharger car didn't seem to actually add that much more performance and added some significant weight on the front, while making it tricky to keep running well, sounded cool though!
The most impressive was a 1990 with a good size turbo, running an anti-lag system! Bangs and pops and fire shooting out of it, and on some super sticky tires with a well sorted suspension and a good aggressive driver, a very angry little yellow bar of soap!
Yup! I picked up timing tools from Amazon. This is my first time timing and engine and I can't say I'm thrilled about the process of timing an MZR. To your point, having the engine on the stand should make it "easier".Hope you bought the timing tools! That was the biggest pain I remember from working on those, trying to get that stupid crank pin lined up and everything where it needed to be. Should be a LOT easier with the engine on the stand.