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Hi from Tsawassen BC

KCM

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I am a long time Healey owner and also have a 67 Jag E type and a 67 Lotus Elan. The Jag is a thing of beauty but the Healey is currently a work in progress. It is a '55 100 BN1 which I bought in 1967. I have done a front to back rebuild and just installed my 3rd motor. This motor is a little different from the first 2 which were stock. I apologize to the purists out there but this one is a Cosworth YB built to 450 hp. I was always intrigued by those mid 60's 327 conversions but could never see my much loved Healey as a anything but British. The Cosworth is that and as an inline 4 it has much in common with its predecessor. The transmission is a T5 and the differential now houses a Quiafe ATB.
I have a ways to go cosmetically but the mechanical side is in place. No modifications were made that altered any part of the car in any way that could not be reversed with wrenches, other than the change to the front universal joint on the drive shaft.
I am hoping to be on the road in the spring.
KCM
 
Welcome! We need pictures.
Been there a few times while taking the ferry
to Vancouver Island.
 
I’ll give it a shot. Just watched Basil’s video on adding images from an iphone but I am on an ipad which should also work.
Here is the engine in place showing the modified intake box that I needed to preserve the original steering column. The next shot is just a general view from the rear followed by one of the louvred hood I got from AH Spares to help with the extra engine heat. And the last one is the Quaife unit in the factory differential. It was a perfect drop in.
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Happy to have you aboard! You will find we have a fairly active Austin Healey forum here! Be sure to jump in there!
 
Is that a 2.0 litre engine?
I know a guy who had one of those heads.
They are a 2.0 ltr Pinto fitted in cortinas, capri early sierras. modded by cosworth,
the one fitted in the rear wheel drive were 240 brake, the four wheel drive were 280 brake.
 
I found this history of the Cosworth YB at Burton Power’s site, who supplied the parts used in my rebuild which was built to take the hybrid T3. In the end I decided to run the stock T3 at least until I know my way around the car again with the increased power and lighter weight. Replacing the stock Austin motor and transmission with the Cosworth YB and Ford Motorsport T5 reduced the curb weight by 400+ lbs bringing it down to around 1800 lbs.
There are guys out there that have built this engine to 1000+ hp for dragsters in the UK!


An incredibly famous engine, the Cosworth YB Turbo actually began life in 1984 as a N/A Cosworth YAA concept. However, the turbo version was launched in the 1986, 3 door Sierra with 204bhp. The infamous RS500 version of the same car followed in 1987 with 225bhp, a bigger T4 turbo, eight injectors (only four connected) and an engine designation of YBD.

Perhaps the most plentiful Sierra, the Sapphire hit the roads between 1988-89 with a 4x4 version being produced from 1990-92. The engine was subsequently available in two versions for this latter car – The YBJ, which incorporated many of the RS500 motorsport type revisions, plus the green cam covered YBG, meant for the US emissions sensitive market. This had three cats, closed loop lambda control and ran on 95 octane unleaded.

Finally the Escort Cosworth took over from 1992 with the big turbo YBT engine, featuring a T34 and four wheel drive, whilst the series came to a halt with the introduction of the T25, small turbo Escort between 1994-96. This also featured Ford EEC IV management, with wasted spark ignition, twin coils, a different series of injectors and a unique black cam cover.

The most common engine is the original YBB (3 dr and 2wd Sapphire), which can be easily tuned with chip and turbo modifications to increase the boost level. However, the 4x4 head is the ideal base since the early type has less water jackets and is susceptible to blowing head gaskets with serious hikes in boost.

To begin with, you’ll need to upgrade the actuator to -31 (dash 31) type and upgrade the management chip to increase the fuel and boost level too - this will typically be to around 270/280bhp. We would recommend that you also fit a good stainless exhaust such as our Mongoose range, plus a K&N filter.

After that stage, you need to swap the injectors for 803s – commonly known as Dark Greens. To this you’ll need a different chip again, plus a 3-BAR MAP sensor to up the boost to 19 PSI (1.3 BAR) resulting in approximately 320-330bhp.

Beyond this level, we’d recommend fitting a Group A or multi-shim head gasket and for extra security in high-boost applications, and an ARP stud and nut kit.

However, around this level, the standard Garrett T3 turbo will have reached its limit although there are now several paths to take in turbo choice. These though are always a trade off between turbo lag and driveability – hence why going straight to a T4 isn’t always a good move. Popular choice is to fit an Escort T34 or a hybrid T3 along with a larger intercooler. T38’s are also available although these aren’t an off-the-shelf Garrett unit and are seen more as a hybrid. You should see power potential with this to around 460bhp, whilst the T34 will give you power to around 380bhp.

At this point – and especially if you want to use a T4 with power potential to the touring car levels of 540bhp - the engine needs to be purpose-built to suit. The reason is you’ll need extra head work in terms of porting, different cams (although BD14s are the limit on the street), lower compression ratios and long stud conversion. The trick is making the most of the unit whilst producing power without huge amounts of lag. Once you get to this stage, we can advise you on the best way forward, depending on the type of engine you have.

A
 
The four wheel drive escorts were built off a shortened sierra floor pan,
Something that was copied on MK1 Escorts. I know of two in existance, one was called Modena Magic. as it was painted Modena Green.
and this one i made.
beast12.jpg

Was originaly 450 brake when it was in a Siearra, later detuned to 350 brake to try and keep the rubber fom spinning off the tyres.
beast6.jpg
 
Thanks for posting these shots. The turbo heat shield looks good and definitely would help keep the paint on the hood from cooking
.
I have a question about gauges for anyone that's done this before. I am set on retaining the original Smiths gauge faces but am faced with engine and transmission that generate electrical signals for speedo and tach. Has anyone swapped internals on the old Smiths gauges for electronic internals?
 
The four wheel drive escorts were built off a shortened sierra floor pan,
Something that was copied on MK1 Escorts. I know of two in existance, one was called Modena Magic. as it was painted Modena Green.
and this one i made.
View attachment 101352
Was originaly 450 brake when it was in a Siearra, later detuned to 350 brake to try and keep the rubber fom spinning off the tyres.
View attachment 101353
What a beautiful paint job! I love the color! PJ
 
You do know that I meant that as pure sarcasm,right?
No way that I can afford a nice one anymore.
 
You do know that I meant that as pure sarcasm,right?
No way that I can afford a nice one anymore.
Dang, I was going to snipe you at $4005. :LOL: Seriously though - gorgeous and rare car!
 
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