BTW the B6 maintains the same legendary durability as the B3. Same block.
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Originally posted by Twistiva View PostNo offense, those are "reasons" but those seem to be mostly "opinions", meaning you though you are stating facts, like more valves per cylinder, what is the benefit of your reason(s). Even the more horsepower/torque has a downside, doesn't it? I mean, the bigger engine you run the more your gas mileage tends to drop.
Without a doubt, anyone who wants more power should do the upgrade but if you're looking for reliability and the best gas mileage, to me, I'd think sticking with the B3 is the way to go.Last edited by Aaronbrook37; 05-17-2013, 05:25 PM.1988 Chevy Sprint Turbo 997cc
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Originally posted by mikeyjd View Postthanks for the clarification. The b3 seems like a good engine to me. I probably won't replace it unnecessarily, but it's good to know that there are other viable/perhaps better options.
It wasn't anybody's build or car that persuaded me to do the swap, but actually the Rocky Mountains. With a single passenger and perhaps 100lbs of gear in the back, my all-stock B3 really struggled to make it through the mountain passes. There were times on a full-speed open-road highway when I had to downshift into second gear to keep my speeds up. That was the breaking point for me: Westiva 2010.
If you're curious to see just how well your car is performing, have your compression tested and do a leak-down test as well while you're in there. Mind you, at 56.8mpg average... I suspect your engine is in tip-top shape. I know your driving habits certainly are. I highly recommend keeping it that way as long as possible!Last edited by Aaronbrook37; 05-17-2013, 05:37 PM.1988 Chevy Sprint Turbo 997cc
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Originally posted by Twistiva View Post343,xxx and still going?
Holy crap!
Mine is about 187,xxx and going so your numbers give me encouragement!youtube.com/neanderpaul 88 festiva LX w/BP G25 MR 5 speed waiting for wiring- 93 Festiva GL auto w/ air, waiting for B6t/G4A-HL - 98 Nissan Quest - 02 Mazda protege 5 wife's DD
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Originally posted by Aaronbrook37 View PostAgreed with you, bud. Had he not quoted me when he said it, I'd have listed those three reasons instead of my ten.White '92 GL 5-speed BP, G series, Aspire/Rio swapped, "Nancy"
White '89 LX 5-speed, Aspire swapped, Weber carb
1988 LX 5-speed
1993 L 5-speed B8, E series, Aspire/Rio swapped
Gone:
1986 Chevrolet Sprint 1990 L Plus Auto
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Originally posted by Spike View PostHeh, yeah.. sorry for quoting you so quickly. :p1988 Chevy Sprint Turbo 997cc
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Originally posted by Aaronbrook37 View PostI'd highly recommend sticking with your factory engine unless you feel a power increase offsets the time, effort, and money it takes to swap engines. Some people reach that breaking point quicker than others. I lasted three years with my B3.
It wasn't anybody's build or car that persuaded me to do the swap, but actually the Rocky Mountains. With a single passenger and perhaps 100lbs of gear in the back, my all-stock B3 really struggled to make it through the mountain passes. There were times on a full-speed open-road highway when I had to downshift into second gear to keep my speeds up. That was the breaking point for me: Westiva 2010.
If you're curious to see just how well your car is performing, have your compression tested and do a leak-down test as well while you're in there. Mind you, at 56.8mpg average... I suspect your engine is in tip-top shape. I know your driving habits certainly are. I highly recommend keeping it that way as long as possible!
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Originally posted by kayweb View Postmy festy has 162k or so, but the transmission is in awful shape (previous owner was a teenager who didn't even realize that it had a fifth gear [gear is stripped])
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No original motor here, the original motor gave up the ghost before I bought the car, I am guessing it was around 300k miles when it gave up. Owner then dropped in a motor with 132K from an 89' (either from an auto, or a carby using the old bits off the dead motor to keep FI)
But the 5-speed is still original, so that has well over 300k miles on it. Whether or not the clutch is original is beyond me. I am willing to bet it is not, since the biting point is pretty low on the pedal.1991 Ford Festiva BP (Full Aspire/Rio Swap) (337k Miles) (Around 95k Engine)
2002 Chevy Cavalier LS Sport 2.2L DOHC Ecotec (Threw a Rod)
1998 Chevy Monte Carlo LS 3.1 V6 (225k miles) Best MPG = 28
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Originally posted by TorqueEffect View PostNo original motor here, the original motor gave up the ghost before I bought the car, I am guessing it was around 300k miles when it gave up. Owner then dropped in a motor with 132K from an 89' (either from an auto, or a carby using the old bits off the dead motor to keep FI)
But the 5-speed is still original, so that has well over 300k miles on it. Whether or not the clutch is original is beyond me. I am willing to bet it is not, since the biting point is pretty low on the pedal.
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Originally posted by kumalaba View Post@ fm5 my 88lx had 429k still getting 37mpg on the hwy & original clutch, it did sound like a diesel though & i entered the high mileage contest & got 2nd place, the festy that won had over 600k!!!! was that scitzz that won that?
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