This is a view from the bottom of the cylinder looking up.

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Not that long, Garys Picnic this year , a few runs later, oil pressure dropped accompanied by a symphony of mechanical nastiness.Gareth wrote:How long had the owner been torturing that before he admitted defeat?
You may very well think that, but this particular example , before being transplanted into hot rod, can claim its origins more likely from the truck line of the brand, due to the sump and strainer layout, certainly not a Mustang, as they had the deep part of the sump at the front of the block.Gareth wrote:
Yep. Never buy a Mustang!
Just messing with you, Mike. I am actually quite partial to the odd Mustang. Good luck with the rebuild.mad machs wrote:You may very well think that, but this particular example , before being transplanted into hot rod, can claim its origins more likely from the truck line of the brand, due to the sump and strainer layout, certainly not a Mustang, as they had the deep part of the sump at the front of the block.Gareth wrote:
Yep. Never buy a Mustang!
Indeed, one could place the counter argument that any other of the available brands might have suffered total and catastrophic component failure, as in reciprocating items leaving the building, when being flailed on the drag strip with practically no oil pressure or indeed any flow rate to speak of. In other words, it stayed in one piece, granted it got mullered, but the disassembly process remained in the conventional.
In my experience, the Cleveland 335 series has been one of the better products to make it to our shores, from both North America and Australia, if you take the trouble to change the oil filter that is