gerg 10,871 Posted March 10, 2022 Cheap Aussie power... Now to get the shit back in the horse...Sent from my CPH2197 using Tapatalk Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Outback Jack 6,352 Posted March 10, 2022 XF and XG should be the same radiator, as it's the same front end.E series are the rounded front end that came out later on the xh, so you will probably find they are the interchangeable ones for straight bolt in.Sent from my motorola edge 20 pro using Tapatalk Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mr Polson 10,214 Posted March 11, 2022 XF and XG should be the same radiator, as it's the same front end.E series are the rounded front end that came out later on the xh, so you will probably find they are the interchangeable ones for straight bolt in.Sent from my motorola edge 20 pro using TapatalkFar from it.Xflow top hose goes to driver's side, lower hose to passenger.4.0 OHC are opposite way around.Plus there's the extra hose on an XG radiator for the expansion tank inlet Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Outback Jack 6,352 Posted March 11, 2022 Turn it upside down....lol. Sent from my motorola edge 20 pro using Tapatalk Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Lord_fahrquhar 2,580 Posted March 11, 2022 Having done this conversion recently some traps for new players: XG, XH and XF are all different in terms of radiators. Sizing mounting points are all different. XG rad mounts do bolt through the rad support into the XF mount holes. The bottom rad support is miles different. XG radiators do not have provision for the ubiquitous Eseries overflow bottle. I went and put an EF radiator in mine, had to make custom mounts top and bottom. Had to space out and modify the receiver dryer to sit forward a bit more and chop quite a bit of steel on the support panel to make it fit. The E-series radiator is just that much wider. It also has to be balanced against the location of the coolant overflow bottle too, which on my car was helped by relocating the battery. Because mine is mounted forward a bit the au hose was just simply chopped down. XG mount plates and regular XF/EA/ED engine mounts are all you need to make it physically fit. Yes, it will be a bit tight in terms of spacing around the alternator but it will be fine. Balancer will clear an XF front crossmember too. Regular e series top hose and XG bottom hose. Be prepared to trim them a little depending on the radiator you use. For air con - crib the fittings TX valve, pipes etc from an XG. Cut the hoses and mount to an AU metal mount on the compressor. Wiring - largely standard ford colour scheme runs across the XF to AU. I hid quite a bit of it and ran it back inside the car, across the dash. Engine loom will largely be easy, but you will need to interface Red switched power feed (ignition switch) Yellow Black Keep Alive Memory (constant 12V) HEGO switched relay - Au's run a 4 wire hego - so sensor 12V, and two grounds run back to the ECU. 12V relay for the heater comes in from the main loom Speedo - white wire will need to feed back to the computer Red black reverse switch back to the main loom (this is the 8 wire plug that normally carries speedo, rpm, oil etc) RPM (pink blue) Air con - Run the blue wire from the dash around to the opposite side of the car. The two wires that run to the low pressure switch need to be connected to the XG TX valve assembly (or you can run the xf stuff with custom piping). A seperate aircon wire will need to go to the ECU for ac demand. Fan relay controllers. Starter relay - its really complex so I bypassed it and ran the starter wire through to the Au ecu loom. Au's run the starter wire through the transmission neutral start switch, smart lock, then the ecu which signals the starter relay. So in effect the ecu doesn't make this call now the motor is switched on in the standard way. If you run the EF hose pipe assembly you will need to modify to fit around the strut tower. This was made easier for me as I drilled and tapped the strut brace (Castlemaine rod shop brought) to assist. Get the rod ship lower stabiliser bar, life is just so much easier than cutting and shutting sumps. If you can get the au bell housing do it, its not strictly necessary but I managed to find one, to mount the xf t5 on the back of. (so its got a lower first than a e series t5). Headers will land in a slightly different spot but e series stuff will help you out in a pinch Power steering lines - XG is metric and XF imperial on the fittings. You will have to swap fittings to adapt to a e series power steering pump. I used XG hoses and fittings, and swapped the xf fitting onto the pipe. 4 1 deankxf, SirkWhyXF, Outback Jack and 2 others reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
motoSycho 690 Posted March 13, 2022 Fuck me! Ran down to Ingelburn in Sydney from Bathurst early this morning to get that motor out. The heat, the rain and time beat me. I also need some Torx spanners to get the bloody accelerator pedal out! So,,,,,, I bought the rest of the car for an extra $200, and will go back down next week, drag it on to my trailer and bring it home to strip at my leisure! 1 1 gerg and deankxf reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
motoSycho 690 Posted March 13, 2022 What wheels will fit the front of this wreck? There are no brakes on the front, so if I can wheels on it, it will make it a lot easier to drag onto the trailer. I've got heaps of XF period wheels? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gerg 10,871 Posted March 13, 2022 What wheels will fit the front of this wreck? There are no brakes on the front, so if I can wheels on it, it will make it a lot easier to drag onto the trailer. I've got heaps of XF period wheels? The old wheels will physically bolt on, they will just stick out a bit. AU-onwards wheels are a more positive offset (tyre sits in further). Sent from my CPH2197 using Tapatalk 1 motoSycho reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
motoSycho 690 Posted March 13, 2022 43 minutes ago, gerg said: The old wheels will physically bolt on, they will just stick out a bit. AU-onwards wheels are a more positive offset (tyre sits in further). Sent from my CPH2197 using Tapatalk That is excellent news! At least I can get wheels on the front to drag it on 1 gerg reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Lord_fahrquhar 2,580 Posted March 15, 2022 Pre au is 0 offset and au on is +35 on a 114.3 5 stud pcd. So xf wheels will fit - might have to drop the callipers off as the rotor is larger than the x series. Id use 15" as a minimum. 2 Outback Jack and gerg reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
motoSycho 690 Posted March 15, 2022 13 hours ago, Lord_fahrquhar said: Pre au is 0 offset and au on is +35 on a 114.3 5 stud pcd. So xf wheels will fit - might have to drop the callipers off as the rotor is larger than the x series. Id use 15" as a minimum. The rotors and calipers are off it, and I have some 15" wheels to put on it. So should all be good,,,, I hope. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gerg 10,871 Posted March 16, 2022 Pre au is 0 offset and au on is +35 on a 114.3 5 stud pcd. So xf wheels will fit - might have to drop the callipers off as the rotor is larger than the x series. Id use 15" as a minimum.The offset on the early girls can vary depending on if they're alloy, steel, rim width, anything from +0 like you said to +15 on the really old steelies and +6 for snowies. So much for a standard track width Sent from my CPH2197 using Tapatalk Share this post Link to post Share on other sites