stomper
07-08-2008, 09:52 AM
With the price of Allante cars going throught he floor, maybe this is the time to mess with them.
from other sources:
I am aware that the Allante is FWD from the factory and this was a horrible mistake. I forget the link, but it can be googled, where a shop has created a RWD swap for the Ford Focus. A Mustang V8 drops right in the engine bay and the swap can be finished in about one weekend.
I'm just curious is anyone has already tried this with the Allante. Anyone know?
I am aware that it would take a lot of time in designing and fabricating a new rear subframe, engine mounts, room form a RWD tranmission for the Northstar, but I also know that it is doable. Anyone in the Allante community a serious gearhead who is into racing?
Anyone visited www.chrfab.com (http://www.chrfab.com/) to see what can be done with a Northstar?
I'm into drifting and I like the Allante but being FWD, it can't drift. I want something different and thought I would investigate the Allante.
Using a Corvette rear subframe from a C4 seemed like the way to go. Perhaps a C5 would prove better?
Going FWD while all the other luxury coupes of the day that were in the same price range were RWD was a huge mistake that only GM could make.
I am wondering if the center tunnel is large enough to accomodate a driveshaft without serious modification?
I would rather connect a Corvette 5-speed to the N* engine if its even possible. I know the bellhousing would need to be customized. The AT stick in the Allante is certainly long enough to be a perfect stick shift and having the ability to shift is > than AT IMO.
I would start out with a 85-89 corvette , then find a junk allante with a junk title thats been in a wreck or a flood or something and use its parts to make the corvette into a period correct "XLR" type thing , the 85-89 vettes are a dime a dozen and if you use a junked allante then your not hurting anything and still building something cool and have the aftermarket to work with the suspension to get the steering raitio and wheel angles setup to drift it.
http://www.cardomain.com/ride/665715/1
Northstar powered 1994 Pontiac GTP....that is RWD!
The engine cradle used in the Allante's is the same as Eldorado/Seville of the same vintage. The rear suspension was of two types, 1987-92 (one transverse leaf spring) or 1993 (two coils). The engine cradle including the drivetrain and the rear suspension were the parts added to the car after it was shipped to the US. The rest of the body is unitized. It is also very strong
At the Corvette Forum a very helpful poster put this up:
I found this link for you : http://www.hpsalvage.com/
And under specification (84-87)vette :
All aluminum independent rear with positrac
drum parking brakes (http://www.cadillacforums.com/forums/#) incorporated into rear rotors
11 1/2" rotors Single piston aluminum calipers
Fiberglass leaf spring
Ratios 2.59, 2.79, 3.07
2 Models 36(7.875" ring gear) 44(8.5" ring gear)
Model 36 was used behind automatics
Model 44 behind manual transmissions (http://www.cadillacforums.com/forums/#)
62" wide hub to hub with discs on
37 1/4" between batwing mounting bolts
44 1/2" between trailing arm mounting bracket bolts.
from other sources:
I am aware that the Allante is FWD from the factory and this was a horrible mistake. I forget the link, but it can be googled, where a shop has created a RWD swap for the Ford Focus. A Mustang V8 drops right in the engine bay and the swap can be finished in about one weekend.
I'm just curious is anyone has already tried this with the Allante. Anyone know?
I am aware that it would take a lot of time in designing and fabricating a new rear subframe, engine mounts, room form a RWD tranmission for the Northstar, but I also know that it is doable. Anyone in the Allante community a serious gearhead who is into racing?
Anyone visited www.chrfab.com (http://www.chrfab.com/) to see what can be done with a Northstar?
I'm into drifting and I like the Allante but being FWD, it can't drift. I want something different and thought I would investigate the Allante.
Using a Corvette rear subframe from a C4 seemed like the way to go. Perhaps a C5 would prove better?
Going FWD while all the other luxury coupes of the day that were in the same price range were RWD was a huge mistake that only GM could make.
I am wondering if the center tunnel is large enough to accomodate a driveshaft without serious modification?
I would rather connect a Corvette 5-speed to the N* engine if its even possible. I know the bellhousing would need to be customized. The AT stick in the Allante is certainly long enough to be a perfect stick shift and having the ability to shift is > than AT IMO.
I would start out with a 85-89 corvette , then find a junk allante with a junk title thats been in a wreck or a flood or something and use its parts to make the corvette into a period correct "XLR" type thing , the 85-89 vettes are a dime a dozen and if you use a junked allante then your not hurting anything and still building something cool and have the aftermarket to work with the suspension to get the steering raitio and wheel angles setup to drift it.
http://www.cardomain.com/ride/665715/1
Northstar powered 1994 Pontiac GTP....that is RWD!
The engine cradle used in the Allante's is the same as Eldorado/Seville of the same vintage. The rear suspension was of two types, 1987-92 (one transverse leaf spring) or 1993 (two coils). The engine cradle including the drivetrain and the rear suspension were the parts added to the car after it was shipped to the US. The rest of the body is unitized. It is also very strong
At the Corvette Forum a very helpful poster put this up:
I found this link for you : http://www.hpsalvage.com/
And under specification (84-87)vette :
All aluminum independent rear with positrac
drum parking brakes (http://www.cadillacforums.com/forums/#) incorporated into rear rotors
11 1/2" rotors Single piston aluminum calipers
Fiberglass leaf spring
Ratios 2.59, 2.79, 3.07
2 Models 36(7.875" ring gear) 44(8.5" ring gear)
Model 36 was used behind automatics
Model 44 behind manual transmissions (http://www.cadillacforums.com/forums/#)
62" wide hub to hub with discs on
37 1/4" between batwing mounting bolts
44 1/2" between trailing arm mounting bracket bolts.