Ok, originally the 289/302 had a 28.8oz flywheel/flexplate. The 351W came along in the late 60 and it picked up the same 28.8oz balance. Then along in 81 (IIRC) the 302 went to 50oz balance. The 351W stayed 28.8oz.willowbilly3 wrote:I thought the later ones used a heavier balance, same as the 351.Dragon wrote:oops yep. The Roller 302 could spin easier so they lighten the flywheel and the balancer so they did spin up faster.
I might as well keep going. In 83 (IIRC) the ho motor came out but it wasn't much to write home about. The first real return to performance was the 85 HO motor. It got the first roller cam, better heads (E5), and forged pistons and was the last mustang to have a holley on it. I think CFI was an option (yuck). In 86 the mustang went EFI and got flat top pistons with some weird heads (E6). It was a bad combo and only a one year thing. The next year in 87 they went back to pistons with a little dish and a new version of the E5 heads. The 87 heads (E7) stayed on the 302 until 1995 (IIRC).
Now, if I wanted to find a 302 for a project I would get one from car-part.com. Get one from a 97-01 explorer or mountaineer. The only thing you have to worry about is the weird angle of the plugs for the gt-40p heads that came on the mid 97 to 01 heads. If you are running manifolds it won't hurt at all. Swap out the cam, put in some better springs and have fun (or just keep it stock). Now that I think of it, truck 302 headers might give you room with the weird plug angles too, but I'm not sure.
Of course you could also try and find a early 97 with the original gt-40 heads. These are very similar to the heads they ran on the 93 cobra and Gen 1 lightnings.
I could go on and on and on..