So as some of you may know, the one main bolt in the passenger side motor mount has been known to break.
ron@whoosh has been awesome enough to carry an upgraded bolt from ARP so you can romp through the gears and no longer worry about this issue.
And HERE is where you can pick one up for your own car!
Here's what's getting installed:
Step one is going to be the same as just about anything else you do under the hood of this car, remove the passenger side headlight. Not 100% needed but makes things much easier.
Next remove the small air vent line from the degass camber and then give it a wiggle up and move the degass chamber out of the way
This gives you a pretty straight shot (with an extension) to get the mount out of the car
Before you go any farther, get out your jack and a piece of wood, support the motor on that side by putting it under the oil pan.
DO NOT put excessive pressure on the oil pan, all it has to do is make contact with the oil pan to support the motor.
The three nuts on the motor side are an 18mm, the three bolts on the frame side are 16mm.
With those removed, pull the mount out. There's tons of room to do so.
This next step is important. Get a 21mm wrench in between the top and bottom of the mount, and use an 18mm socket on a ratchet and remove the old bolt.
DO NOT USE AN IMPACT GUN AND MAKE SURE YOU HOLD THE WRENCH TO AVOID DESTROYING YOUR MOUNT
You'll also want to make a mark or two on the two sections of the mount for alignment - we'll get to that later.
Here's what you're going to see once you have it apart. As you can see there's no key ways or notches to align the top and bottom section of the mount, that's where those marks you made earlier will come into play.
Get your new ARP bolt and apply some blue thread lock to it.
Using the wrench to hold the bottom section of the mount grab your torque wrench and tighten the new bolt to 50 ft-lbs making sure to line up your marks you made previously before disassembling the mount.
The new bolt is 14mm.
Having someone help hold the wrench while torquing the bolt is a huge help.
Get the mount back in the car, start the nuts and bolts for the mount by hand. Lift the motor up slightly with the jack.
Start by torquing the three nuts on the motor side to 59 ft-lbs.
(also a note. using an extension with a torque wrench does change the torque you're putting out. the wrench i'm using has an option to put in the length of the extension and it does the math for me. just keep that in mind when doing these next two steps.)
Lower the jack and let the mount hold the weight of the motor.
Torque the frame side mount bolts to 35 ft-lbs.
Get your degass chamber slid back in place, and the air vent line clipped back in.
Top back off with 50/50 ford orange coolant and distilled water if you lost any.
Reinstall your headlight, close the hood and you're now all set to go hoon through the gears without having to worry about that bolt breaking on you!
ron@whoosh has been awesome enough to carry an upgraded bolt from ARP so you can romp through the gears and no longer worry about this issue.
And HERE is where you can pick one up for your own car!
Here's what's getting installed:
Step one is going to be the same as just about anything else you do under the hood of this car, remove the passenger side headlight. Not 100% needed but makes things much easier.
Next remove the small air vent line from the degass camber and then give it a wiggle up and move the degass chamber out of the way
This gives you a pretty straight shot (with an extension) to get the mount out of the car
Before you go any farther, get out your jack and a piece of wood, support the motor on that side by putting it under the oil pan.
DO NOT put excessive pressure on the oil pan, all it has to do is make contact with the oil pan to support the motor.
The three nuts on the motor side are an 18mm, the three bolts on the frame side are 16mm.
With those removed, pull the mount out. There's tons of room to do so.
This next step is important. Get a 21mm wrench in between the top and bottom of the mount, and use an 18mm socket on a ratchet and remove the old bolt.
DO NOT USE AN IMPACT GUN AND MAKE SURE YOU HOLD THE WRENCH TO AVOID DESTROYING YOUR MOUNT
You'll also want to make a mark or two on the two sections of the mount for alignment - we'll get to that later.
Here's what you're going to see once you have it apart. As you can see there's no key ways or notches to align the top and bottom section of the mount, that's where those marks you made earlier will come into play.
Get your new ARP bolt and apply some blue thread lock to it.
Using the wrench to hold the bottom section of the mount grab your torque wrench and tighten the new bolt to 50 ft-lbs making sure to line up your marks you made previously before disassembling the mount.
The new bolt is 14mm.
Having someone help hold the wrench while torquing the bolt is a huge help.
Get the mount back in the car, start the nuts and bolts for the mount by hand. Lift the motor up slightly with the jack.
Start by torquing the three nuts on the motor side to 59 ft-lbs.
(also a note. using an extension with a torque wrench does change the torque you're putting out. the wrench i'm using has an option to put in the length of the extension and it does the math for me. just keep that in mind when doing these next two steps.)
Lower the jack and let the mount hold the weight of the motor.
Torque the frame side mount bolts to 35 ft-lbs.
Get your degass chamber slid back in place, and the air vent line clipped back in.
Top back off with 50/50 ford orange coolant and distilled water if you lost any.
Reinstall your headlight, close the hood and you're now all set to go hoon through the gears without having to worry about that bolt breaking on you!
Last edited: