paulwilliamson8230
New member
Hello, new to the forum but have been a reader for a while now. Early this year I bought a 91 town car on marketplace, I had the cash to get a much nicer looking 3rd gen Town Car but have always had an affinity for the bigger, boxier 2nd gen. what better when I found the first year of the 2nd gen and also the first year for the 4.6 for sale with less than 100k on the clock. When I went to look at it it was in pretty good overall condition although the clearcoat was chipped away on most of the car, only one window rolled down and someone had already did the coil spring conversion on the rear deleting the air ride ( with seemingly way too soft of springs) . The car started right up a bit smokey at first but no rough idle and no leaks. Figuring car probably belonged to an old lady who only drove it on Sunday to church hence the low mileage, I forked over the cash and drove it 70 mi back home without issue. The next day however I go out to start the car and it's smoking like crazy and has an idle lope like it's cammed out. Check oil it's a qt low so I figured it's probably valve seals as they are known to be an issue in the early 4.6. I decide to be thorough and end up doing a compression test, all cyl test within spec except for cyl 3 which is at 30 psi ( this is doing a dry compression test with all plugs out and throttle open) . Next I do a wet compression test to rule out stuck valve or head gasket and pressure comes up to about 90 psi. At this point I'm pretty bummed out, thinking I got a low mileage engine I wouldn't have to worry about and could spend time restoring the exterior, now it looks like I have bad rings in cyl 3. As it is now it smokes like crazy chuggs and runs rough so I have it parked. However my brother has a 2002 town car he wrecked into a tree with a perfectly good 2 valve in it, I'm wondering how difficult it would be to swap that motor into my 91 and if anyone has ever attempted such a task. I know a lot of the top end is way different and getting an obd 2 and trying to wire it into an obd 1 sounds like a nightmare but I'm sure it's possible. Maybe even buy a new intake and just put a carb on it and avoid a lot of the computer crap. It would be a nice increase in power with the newer motor and from what I read the old ford aod trans in the 91 should have the same bell housing pattern as the new motor but not sure about the motor mounts matching up or a whole mess of other issues I haven't thought about. I'm a pretty good shade tree mechanic and have done many engine swaps on chevy but I'm worried this may be biteing off a bit more than I can chew. Any advice would be appreciated, should I even attempt this or wld I be better off just buying a rebuild to put in it.