Professor Fate
Push the button, Max...
Well, I swapped the engine on my lawnmower in under 20 minutes...
I assume since you had to use the Hughes fuel pump adapter that the cam is a Magnum shaft- did you take into consideration the rocker ratio difference between the Magnum and the LA (1.6 vs 1.5) when you put it into your roller LA? Total lift will be a bit less than advertised.It has a Hughes roller cam with the fuel pump adapter on it.
In my Town there was a pair of brothers with friends that would rent a car, strip it down, install their drive train in it, race it all weekend a NE. Dragway, then reassemble and return. They were the Benevento brothers.Many, many, many years ago we would go street racing on Friday nights. If we had problems, we would pull an all nighter to get it back out for Saturday's racing. Again if we had problems, we would spend Saturday night and Sunday putting things right to go to work the next week, only to do it again the next weekend. I can't tell you how many engines, transmissions, clutches and rearends we worked over on weekends. Alas, I am WAY to old to even contemplate something like that.
Bring plenty of Beer and Bandages...I'll be going to over Greg's to help with the swap. We should be able to do it in one day. Thank goodness he has a lift.

And Motrin.Bring plenty of Beer and Bandages...![]()
More than maybe with a VW Beetle. In my younger days, Those were about all I worked on. There used to be a Bug-In car show, drag race, swap meet at OCIR (Orange County International Raceway) at El Toro, Ca. They had a engine pulling contest too. You had to drive up, put the car on stands, pull the engine, roll it back over a line 10ft (I think, maybe 20ft), roll it back under the car, jack it back up in place, hook everything back up, lower it down, and drive away. Even though I never was able to enter the contest, I practiced at work. I modified a floor jack to securely hold the engine from falling off, found the best tools for the job, and also the best car to use (a 1967 Beetle). My best time in practice was 2 minutes and 17 seconds. Oh to be 22 years old again!I was at a Mopar car club meeting last night and I asked this question. One dude said his best time was 45 minutes. I called bullshit on that.
Come on, man....be realistic. Even with an automatic car if you're really fast, have air tools or cordless stuff, that is draining and removing a radiator, disconnecting a torque converter and bell housing, starter, all front end engine accessories, motor mount bolts, disconnecting all wiring, maybe unbolting the exhaust manifolds from the heads, disconnecting the fuel line, KD linkage, throttle cable and vacuum line to the brake booster, removing the engine and then reversing ALL of that while also getting it started up and driving out.
There is no way you are 45 minutes fast with a new cam.
No way you'd do it even with an engine with the distributor in place and already set to proper timing, full of oil and oil filter in place.
Now if this were a VW Beetle, maybe.....

Read up on eliminating all members of the nightshade family from your diet. Tomato, pepper, eggplant, potato, ciggies. There are supplements that can help. You can't cure genetic predisposition to joint problems, but maybe lessen them.Oh,, when I turned 60 and everything went down hill from there.. I'm one of those guys that can get down, it's hell trying to get back up.
I'm not overweight just my joints don't like me anymore..
So... no gnocchi with a marinara sauce?Read up on eliminating all members of the nightshade family from your diet. Tomato, pepper, eggplant, potato, ciggies. There are supplements that can help. You can't cure genetic predisposition to joint problems, but maybe lessen them.
A 408 in a little Colt? Awesome. Those tires look awful skinny.September 13. Threw number 3 rod at drag strip. My friend lives fifteen minutes from the track and he also happens to have a fully dressed 360 magnum to replace my trashed 408 magnum.
Just before 5:00 we are pushing the Colt onto the ramp.
By 9:30 the new engine was in.
We did some odd and ends but a lot of time was spent making a new base pan, the Colt needs a rear sump. We couldn’t find a suitable rear sump so we cut from the mid sump to the back of the factory pan out, turned it around and welded back together.
The next morning we made it back to the track in time for competition. I felt full competition was a but much so opted to just run a couple of test and tune passes.
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lol, i'm putting a ford fe big block in my 58 nash rambler gasser project. there's 2 ways to go fast, more power or less weight....... or both of course so that's 3A 408 in a little Colt? Awesome. Those tires look awful skinny.

Tires are 11.5x26 kinda small but they don’t spin. It’s actually a bit lazy coming out and the car is heavier than you’d think, 3000 lbs with me.A 408 in a little Colt? Awesome. Those tires look awful skinny.