Hi All,
not sure if the thread title got your interest but if it did here goes.
On the otherside of the universe (New Zealand) we have a plentiful supply of the FS engine in cars from the Mazda 626 through to the SP20 and an almost identical engine in the Ford equivilent of the same cars.
Engine transplants are a resonably common performance modification (at least in the crowd I hang around with) due to the low cost of imported Japanese engines and the resonable bang for buck they offer. The type of conversions are many, but throwing a toyota 4age or 3sge engine in your old Ford has been done to death here. I have ended up with a Mazda FS engine in my Ford Anglia (40 years old) and the poor old thing gets its usual workout on gravel rally stages around the country. The low end torque of this engine is great and makes it ideal for tight twisty rally stages. We run the engine in a rear wheel drive configeration with twin sidedraft carbs. The engine has virtually no electronics bar the electronic ignition. The rest of the car is Bilstein coil overs, quick rack and 5 link rear suspension.
Now to my point.............the FS engine is all but forgotten in NZ and virtually no one knows anything about making them go faster. I have spent the last few days surfing this forum and are amazed at the info that is available and the level of knowlegde you guys have about a forgotten engine in NZ.
I have a few questions I am hoping you can help with?
1. FS-ZE and FS-DE - What is the difference and how can you tell them apart?
2. What are the weak areas in the motor? (I have ran the same engine for 3 years and rev it to 7500 most events, the last event we had a few over revs to 9000 and still no bang).
3. The engine runs a distributor driven by the exhaust cam, anyone make aftermarket cams for this engine?
4. The engine makes 140whp, is this about average?
I know the whole thing is a bit outside the box but I am looking for more power and I like the engine.
Any help and suggestions would be appreciated.
not sure if the thread title got your interest but if it did here goes.
On the otherside of the universe (New Zealand) we have a plentiful supply of the FS engine in cars from the Mazda 626 through to the SP20 and an almost identical engine in the Ford equivilent of the same cars.
Engine transplants are a resonably common performance modification (at least in the crowd I hang around with) due to the low cost of imported Japanese engines and the resonable bang for buck they offer. The type of conversions are many, but throwing a toyota 4age or 3sge engine in your old Ford has been done to death here. I have ended up with a Mazda FS engine in my Ford Anglia (40 years old) and the poor old thing gets its usual workout on gravel rally stages around the country. The low end torque of this engine is great and makes it ideal for tight twisty rally stages. We run the engine in a rear wheel drive configeration with twin sidedraft carbs. The engine has virtually no electronics bar the electronic ignition. The rest of the car is Bilstein coil overs, quick rack and 5 link rear suspension.
Now to my point.............the FS engine is all but forgotten in NZ and virtually no one knows anything about making them go faster. I have spent the last few days surfing this forum and are amazed at the info that is available and the level of knowlegde you guys have about a forgotten engine in NZ.
I have a few questions I am hoping you can help with?
1. FS-ZE and FS-DE - What is the difference and how can you tell them apart?
2. What are the weak areas in the motor? (I have ran the same engine for 3 years and rev it to 7500 most events, the last event we had a few over revs to 9000 and still no bang).
3. The engine runs a distributor driven by the exhaust cam, anyone make aftermarket cams for this engine?
4. The engine makes 140whp, is this about average?
I know the whole thing is a bit outside the box but I am looking for more power and I like the engine.
Any help and suggestions would be appreciated.