Restoring - General discussions that span across many different groups of years and models > Drivetrain
Engine ID code help
Norcal87:
Hello mustang Friends today while chageing my oil . I thought look for my engine code well I found it but kinda confused the block date code says November build for engine but the other code says 1968 and it also says ford Falcon. I was told by my father inlaw he said he's 99 percent sure it's the numbers matching motor
J_Speegle:
--- Quote from: Norcal87 on May 06, 2017, 02:44:38 PM ---Hello mustang Friends today while chageing my oil . I thought look for my engine code well I found it but kinda confused the block date code says November build for engine but the other code says 1968 and it also says ford Falcon. I was told by my father inlaw he said he's 99 percent sure it's the numbers matching motor
--- End quote ---
Not sure what is confusing other than your comparing and trying to decode the design purpose for the engineering number. IMHO that's sort of a waste of time
Remember that almost half of all 68's where built in 67 ;) Since the production year started in the summer and not in January
A few thoughts
1- When was the 68 built? Guessing after Nov 67
2- Is the VIN stamped on the drivers side of the block just below the head and to the rearend side of the block?
Those two findings should help allot
Norcal87:
Car was built December 15 1967 . iam confused that it says C8DE which would ford falcon shouldn't it have a Z I there for mustang ?
J_Speegle:
--- Quote from: Norcal87 on May 06, 2017, 06:03:14 PM ---.... iam confused that it says C8DE which would ford falcon shouldn't it have a Z I there for mustang ?
--- End quote ---
No
They didn't design each part used on a Mustang initially or only for a Mustang. When parts could be used from other applications they were originally designed for (short answer here) they did. It would have cost Ford tens of millions of dollars or more to design and make parts for each car independently from all the models and makes they produced.
jwc66k:
Ford had many engineering design groups, one for each car line, and each had a letter assigned to it. That letter was used in the third position of the Ford part numbering system - C6AE. It signified which engineering group started the design and had design responsibility. Any group could borrow another's design, Mustangs used Falcon and full size Ford engines for many years. The first Mustang to have an engine with a "Z" in the part number was the Boss 302. This part crossover system extended into parts of engines, the distributor for 1965 289CID engine with a four barrel carburetor was from a Comet - C5GF-12127-A. Early carburetors were also borrowed, but the Mustang design group had to create their own as other cars had different requirements.
A few for reference: "A" = full size Ford; "B" = Fairlane; "G" = Comet; "D" = Falcon; "Z" = Mustang.
Jim
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