350 Swap?
Im looking to swap my 86 xj6 over to a 350 instead id its 4.2 I6. The I6 already has about 165k miles on it and the engine has never been able to work for more than a week before something goes wrong on it. Im young and dont have money to pay for mechanics every time I want to use my car anymore so doing a 350 swap would be easier for me as I can work on that myself. I was wondering if anyone here has any experience in doing so and what to expect with it. Ive seen the conversion kits for sale as well and am considering to get one.
It’s certainly doable, a few of us here have done it, and a few bought their cars already done! Be aware, it’s not a cheap ordeal, there’s also a lot of fiddle things to sort out, like getting all gauges working again, etc, are you thinking of going carbureted or fuel injected, you’ll see both here, carburetor is the simplest way, but it’s a bit of a backward step, you can do a search on my threads and read about my swap, there’s also lt1jaguar (Dave) he recently did same swap, good luck, people here will help you no matter which you decide great bunch of people here!
It’s certainly doable, a few of us here have done it, and a few bought their cars already done! Be aware, it’s not a cheap ordeal, there’s also a lot of fiddle things to sort out, like getting all gauges working again, etc, are you thinking of going carbureted or fuel injected, you’ll see both here, carburetor is the simplest way, but it’s a bit of a backward step, you can do a search on my threads and read about my swap, there’s also lt1jaguar (Dave) he recently did same swap, good luck, people here will help you no matter which you decide great bunch of people here!
Here's some reading; perhaps you've already visited, I dunno
Jaguar Specialties
https://www.johnscars.com/
What problems are you having with your 4.2 engine? Sometimes there are known, easy fixes. I'm not anti-V8 swap, but I'd hate to see someone go thru the effort, time, and expense of a V8 swap when easier alternatives might be out there.
OTOH, if you just have your heart set on a V8....nuthin' wrong with that, either :-)
Cheers
DD
Jaguar Specialties
https://www.johnscars.com/
What problems are you having with your 4.2 engine? Sometimes there are known, easy fixes. I'm not anti-V8 swap, but I'd hate to see someone go thru the effort, time, and expense of a V8 swap when easier alternatives might be out there.
OTOH, if you just have your heart set on a V8....nuthin' wrong with that, either :-)
Cheers
DD
Another option is JTR (Jags That Run). https://jagsthatrun.com/
Husband used these guys when stuffing a Gen 1 350 (which is what you're thinking about) into his 240Z so he, of course, thinks they're the Best.
(';')
Husband used these guys when stuffing a Gen 1 350 (which is what you're thinking about) into his 240Z so he, of course, thinks they're the Best.
(';')
I'm seeing a bit of a contradiction here, you don't have money to pay a mechanic, but you can do an engine swap yourself? I'm in the middle of doing a swap ( to the supercharged XJR engine) and I can tell you it's far more complicated, expensive and time consuming than I ever though it would be, and I had access to cars that had been converted before and took all sorts of photos and was told what the trouble spots were.
If you want it do it for the sake of doing it, that's fine, but expect it to not be quick, simple or cheap.
Another consideration is when you're done you've created an one off orphan that few mechanics will want to work on. A Chevy shop isn't going to touch a Jaguar, and a Jaguar shop knows nothing about Chevys. Which wiring colour codes are you going to use? Jaguar or GM? Where will you cross over, and are you going to draw your own wiring diagram for the car? If you don't, then only you can start tracking wires when something doesn't work. In many ways an engine swap forces you to be your own mechanic because you have created something unique. Unless of course, you have your own mechanic who will do the swap and maintain it, but that's not in the "I have no money" story
There is nothing particularly difficult about the 4.2, if you have sufficient mechanical skills to do a swap, then you have plenty of skills to maintain the 4.2. All the knowledge and help you could want is here.
If you want it do it for the sake of doing it, that's fine, but expect it to not be quick, simple or cheap.
Another consideration is when you're done you've created an one off orphan that few mechanics will want to work on. A Chevy shop isn't going to touch a Jaguar, and a Jaguar shop knows nothing about Chevys. Which wiring colour codes are you going to use? Jaguar or GM? Where will you cross over, and are you going to draw your own wiring diagram for the car? If you don't, then only you can start tracking wires when something doesn't work. In many ways an engine swap forces you to be your own mechanic because you have created something unique. Unless of course, you have your own mechanic who will do the swap and maintain it, but that's not in the "I have no money" story

There is nothing particularly difficult about the 4.2, if you have sufficient mechanical skills to do a swap, then you have plenty of skills to maintain the 4.2. All the knowledge and help you could want is here.
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Im looking to swap my 86 xj6 over to a 350 instead id its 4.2 I6. The I6 already has about 165k miles on it and the engine has never been able to work for more than a week before something goes wrong on it. Im young and dont have money to pay for mechanics every time I want to use my car anymore so doing a 350 swap would be easier for me as I can work on that myself. I was wondering if anyone here has any experience in doing so and what to expect with it. Ive seen the conversion kits for sale as well and am considering to get one.
Last edited by Fraser Mitchell; Nov 2, 2022 at 09:56 AM.
+1 on refurbishing the XK engine already in the vehicle as the best and least expensive method to make the car reliable.
Where is the vehicle located? Find a Jaguar specialist who know what they're doing instead of creating a lump no one wants to touch.
Where is the vehicle located? Find a Jaguar specialist who know what they're doing instead of creating a lump no one wants to touch.
Logan,
Read my thread, if you haven't already. It will bring up some of the issues that need to be solved doing a Chevy lump. There were many more that didn't get posted.
There is about a 60/40 split in advise to fix your existing 4.2 or do a 350 swap. Jagboi64 posted a good set of issues/questions you will need to consider when doing the swap. But it was just the short-list of the many, many things that will need to be addressed. To do yourself proud in a swap, you need time, money, skill, a dedicated place to work, and most importantly, the long term commitment to see it to the end and make it a reliable car, better than what you have.
The other side is suggesting to figure out what are the issues with the 4.2 and correct them. Fraser's point of a complete overhaul would be the obvious route for me, given the high mileage. "Rings/bearings/valve job" might do the trick, provided everything else still had life left. This path would, of coarse, solve all the interconnect problems of a swap.
I don't know anything about rebuilding the Jag XK engine in particular, but there are many very excellent members on the Forum who do and would be willing to give any help you might need. There are also many knowledgeable members who are willing to give you any help you'll need if you decide to "lump".
I made a specific and committed decision nearly 4 years ago to build another car, one that I would put a different engine in. I didn't plan for a Jaguar, but the one I found fit the bill and I liked the look. I have a shop, truck-load of tools, unlimited time, and allotted a certain amount of $$$$. But most importantly, I really wanted to do this build (swap included) and my commitment saw me to the end. If you start and then stop anywhere short of completion, everything becomes a waste and you have a completely disabled car.
Anyway, that's my two cents worth based on my experiences with lumping.
Dave
https://www.jaguarforums.com/forum/x...j6-lt1-211881/
Read my thread, if you haven't already. It will bring up some of the issues that need to be solved doing a Chevy lump. There were many more that didn't get posted.
There is about a 60/40 split in advise to fix your existing 4.2 or do a 350 swap. Jagboi64 posted a good set of issues/questions you will need to consider when doing the swap. But it was just the short-list of the many, many things that will need to be addressed. To do yourself proud in a swap, you need time, money, skill, a dedicated place to work, and most importantly, the long term commitment to see it to the end and make it a reliable car, better than what you have.
The other side is suggesting to figure out what are the issues with the 4.2 and correct them. Fraser's point of a complete overhaul would be the obvious route for me, given the high mileage. "Rings/bearings/valve job" might do the trick, provided everything else still had life left. This path would, of coarse, solve all the interconnect problems of a swap.
I don't know anything about rebuilding the Jag XK engine in particular, but there are many very excellent members on the Forum who do and would be willing to give any help you might need. There are also many knowledgeable members who are willing to give you any help you'll need if you decide to "lump".
I made a specific and committed decision nearly 4 years ago to build another car, one that I would put a different engine in. I didn't plan for a Jaguar, but the one I found fit the bill and I liked the look. I have a shop, truck-load of tools, unlimited time, and allotted a certain amount of $$$$. But most importantly, I really wanted to do this build (swap included) and my commitment saw me to the end. If you start and then stop anywhere short of completion, everything becomes a waste and you have a completely disabled car.
Anyway, that's my two cents worth based on my experiences with lumping.
Dave
https://www.jaguarforums.com/forum/x...j6-lt1-211881/
I will echo Dave's comments above. Even with a dedicated facility, tools, knowledge, and a crate full of pre-fabricated parts ready to go and paid for, it's still a challenge to get a project done. You will inevitably run into technical challenges that will incur additional cost and labor (read: downtime).
My past projects (a handful of LS engines into foreign cars) always started with a few questions:
-Why am I doing this, and what are my goals?
-Perhaps reliability, but know that upon swapping a car you become its "caretaker", as you will be the only one that knows the ins and outs such as wiring and plumbing details unless you thoroughly document that.
-Is it in my budget and allotted timetable?
-Also examine your current skillset. If you can't repair the existing Jag motor due to either lack of finances or knowledge, it may not be as easy to swap the Chevy motor as you think.
-How I am getting around while this car is down?
-When I swapped my BMW 540i 10 years ago the first thing I did was buy a reliable daily driver (cheap Subaru Outback).
-What else needs to be swapped to support the new drivetrain?
-Significant costs can be expected from the various engine mounts and hardware, engine management, wiring harness, fuel system, cooling system, exhaust fabrication, driveshaft, shifter etc...everyone always think it's dirt cheap to swap in a Chevy motor because "they're only a few hundred bucks at a wrecking yard". Also consider any costs associated with refreshing your new powerplant/transmission.
The worst thing you can do is jump in without a plan and start dumping money into the project without understanding the true scope of work. That is how projects end up sitting on jackstands for years or rotting in backyards.
My past projects (a handful of LS engines into foreign cars) always started with a few questions:
-Why am I doing this, and what are my goals?
-Perhaps reliability, but know that upon swapping a car you become its "caretaker", as you will be the only one that knows the ins and outs such as wiring and plumbing details unless you thoroughly document that.
-Is it in my budget and allotted timetable?
-Also examine your current skillset. If you can't repair the existing Jag motor due to either lack of finances or knowledge, it may not be as easy to swap the Chevy motor as you think.
-How I am getting around while this car is down?
-When I swapped my BMW 540i 10 years ago the first thing I did was buy a reliable daily driver (cheap Subaru Outback).
-What else needs to be swapped to support the new drivetrain?
-Significant costs can be expected from the various engine mounts and hardware, engine management, wiring harness, fuel system, cooling system, exhaust fabrication, driveshaft, shifter etc...everyone always think it's dirt cheap to swap in a Chevy motor because "they're only a few hundred bucks at a wrecking yard". Also consider any costs associated with refreshing your new powerplant/transmission.
The worst thing you can do is jump in without a plan and start dumping money into the project without understanding the true scope of work. That is how projects end up sitting on jackstands for years or rotting in backyards.
My swap bewgan in 2001. It passed CA SMOg in 2006. I was working then, time to work on the car was on week ends.
I hve twisted a lot of wrnches. Including buiding a 50 Hot rod from scratch. and rebyikdig ghe IL6 in my FJ40. Twice!!!
The jaguar swap was the most chalenging. WFI, Never before!\\There were aboput 5 outfits to deal with as to a kit. I chose Johnscars in the Fworth Texaas area. Most complete. Not cheap either. I vought a harness. Mistake. should have modified the existing GM harness.
Ging carb makes it simper. Swap in a fuel pump as the Efi delivers too much PSI. Add a regulator, Not sure as to tht one.
Guages not comlex Use Haf sensors in the Gm. Tach and speedo a bit more complex.
Basics. Engine mounts. Transmission mounts. Gm radiator. Jag radiator not enough.
Then exhaust. .
Most Gm maniflds will not clear the steering tower, GN Rm hornbs are the usual fix.
The muffler shop will want about a grand to do a god job.
but they sure do run ne.I recall my frst trip around the block. Open manifolds. No bonnett!!!
Carl
I hve twisted a lot of wrnches. Including buiding a 50 Hot rod from scratch. and rebyikdig ghe IL6 in my FJ40. Twice!!!
The jaguar swap was the most chalenging. WFI, Never before!\\There were aboput 5 outfits to deal with as to a kit. I chose Johnscars in the Fworth Texaas area. Most complete. Not cheap either. I vought a harness. Mistake. should have modified the existing GM harness.
Ging carb makes it simper. Swap in a fuel pump as the Efi delivers too much PSI. Add a regulator, Not sure as to tht one.
Guages not comlex Use Haf sensors in the Gm. Tach and speedo a bit more complex.
Basics. Engine mounts. Transmission mounts. Gm radiator. Jag radiator not enough.
Then exhaust. .
Most Gm maniflds will not clear the steering tower, GN Rm hornbs are the usual fix.
The muffler shop will want about a grand to do a god job.
but they sure do run ne.I recall my frst trip around the block. Open manifolds. No bonnett!!!
Carl
I agree that rebuilding it would be easier, however that being said, finding parts for them is insanely difficult and expensive. And the vehicle is in IL, I have contacted a few jaguar dealerships and a specialist. Most of them said they dont even have anyone who would know where to begin with a car this old. And the ones that do charge 230 bucks and hour. And overall, the XK engine is just plagued with problems since it was made and although an engine swap would be costly, itd save me a lot of money in the long run as I can work on a 350 motor myself. I had the car at a mechanic for 6 weeks and even after that they still couldn’t get it, and ive been going to these guys for years and have yet to be let down.
Here's some reading; perhaps you've already visited, I dunno
Jaguar Specialties
https://www.johnscars.com/
What problems are you having with your 4.2 engine? Sometimes there are known, easy fixes. I'm not anti-V8 swap, but I'd hate to see someone go thru the effort, time, and expense of a V8 swap when easier alternatives might be out there.
OTOH, if you just have your heart set on a V8....nuthin' wrong with that, either :-)
Cheers
DD
Jaguar Specialties
https://www.johnscars.com/
What problems are you having with your 4.2 engine? Sometimes there are known, easy fixes. I'm not anti-V8 swap, but I'd hate to see someone go thru the effort, time, and expense of a V8 swap when easier alternatives might be out there.
OTOH, if you just have your heart set on a V8....nuthin' wrong with that, either :-)
Cheers
DD

My swap bewgan in 2001. It passed CA SMOg in 2006. I was working then, time to work on the car was on week ends.
I hve twisted a lot of wrnches. Including buiding a 50 Hot rod from scratch. and rebyikdig ghe IL6 in my FJ40. Twice!!!
The jaguar swap was the most chalenging. WFI, Never before!\\There were aboput 5 outfits to deal with as to a kit. I chose Johnscars in the Fworth Texaas area. Most complete. Not cheap either. I vought a harness. Mistake. should have modified the existing GM harness.
Ging carb makes it simper. Swap in a fuel pump as the Efi delivers too much PSI. Add a regulator, Not sure as to tht one.
Guages not comlex Use Haf sensors in the Gm. Tach and speedo a bit more complex.
Basics. Engine mounts. Transmission mounts. Gm radiator. Jag radiator not enough.
Then exhaust. .
Most Gm maniflds will not clear the steering tower, GN Rm hornbs are the usual fix.
The muffler shop will want about a grand to do a god job.
but they sure do run ne.I recall my frst trip around the block. Open manifolds. No bonnett!!!
Carl
I hve twisted a lot of wrnches. Including buiding a 50 Hot rod from scratch. and rebyikdig ghe IL6 in my FJ40. Twice!!!
The jaguar swap was the most chalenging. WFI, Never before!\\There were aboput 5 outfits to deal with as to a kit. I chose Johnscars in the Fworth Texaas area. Most complete. Not cheap either. I vought a harness. Mistake. should have modified the existing GM harness.
Ging carb makes it simper. Swap in a fuel pump as the Efi delivers too much PSI. Add a regulator, Not sure as to tht one.
Guages not comlex Use Haf sensors in the Gm. Tach and speedo a bit more complex.
Basics. Engine mounts. Transmission mounts. Gm radiator. Jag radiator not enough.
Then exhaust. .
Most Gm maniflds will not clear the steering tower, GN Rm hornbs are the usual fix.
The muffler shop will want about a grand to do a god job.
but they sure do run ne.I recall my frst trip around the block. Open manifolds. No bonnett!!!
Carl
I will echo Dave's comments above. Even with a dedicated facility, tools, knowledge, and a crate full of pre-fabricated parts ready to go and paid for, it's still a challenge to get a project done. You will inevitably run into technical challenges that will incur additional cost and labor (read: downtime).
My past projects (a handful of LS engines into foreign cars) always started with a few questions:
-Why am I doing this, and what are my goals?
-Perhaps reliability, but know that upon swapping a car you become its "caretaker", as you will be the only one that knows the ins and outs such as wiring and plumbing details unless you thoroughly document that.
-Is it in my budget and allotted timetable?
-Also examine your current skillset. If you can't repair the existing Jag motor due to either lack of finances or knowledge, it may not be as easy to swap the Chevy motor as you think.
-How I am getting around while this car is down?
-When I swapped my BMW 540i 10 years ago the first thing I did was buy a reliable daily driver (cheap Subaru Outback).
-What else needs to be swapped to support the new drivetrain?
-Significant costs can be expected from the various engine mounts and hardware, engine management, wiring harness, fuel system, cooling system, exhaust fabrication, driveshaft, shifter etc...everyone always think it's dirt cheap to swap in a Chevy motor because "they're only a few hundred bucks at a wrecking yard". Also consider any costs associated with refreshing your new powerplant/transmission.
The worst thing you can do is jump in without a plan and start dumping money into the project without understanding the true scope of work. That is how projects end up sitting on jackstands for years or rotting in backyards.
My past projects (a handful of LS engines into foreign cars) always started with a few questions:
-Why am I doing this, and what are my goals?
-Perhaps reliability, but know that upon swapping a car you become its "caretaker", as you will be the only one that knows the ins and outs such as wiring and plumbing details unless you thoroughly document that.
-Is it in my budget and allotted timetable?
-Also examine your current skillset. If you can't repair the existing Jag motor due to either lack of finances or knowledge, it may not be as easy to swap the Chevy motor as you think.
-How I am getting around while this car is down?
-When I swapped my BMW 540i 10 years ago the first thing I did was buy a reliable daily driver (cheap Subaru Outback).
-What else needs to be swapped to support the new drivetrain?
-Significant costs can be expected from the various engine mounts and hardware, engine management, wiring harness, fuel system, cooling system, exhaust fabrication, driveshaft, shifter etc...everyone always think it's dirt cheap to swap in a Chevy motor because "they're only a few hundred bucks at a wrecking yard". Also consider any costs associated with refreshing your new powerplant/transmission.
The worst thing you can do is jump in without a plan and start dumping money into the project without understanding the true scope of work. That is how projects end up sitting on jackstands for years or rotting in backyards.
Logan,
Read my thread, if you haven't already. It will bring up some of the issues that need to be solved doing a Chevy lump. There were many more that didn't get posted.
There is about a 60/40 split in advise to fix your existing 4.2 or do a 350 swap. Jagboi64 posted a good set of issues/questions you will need to consider when doing the swap. But it was just the short-list of the many, many things that will need to be addressed. To do yourself proud in a swap, you need time, money, skill, a dedicated place to work, and most importantly, the long term commitment to see it to the end and make it a reliable car, better than what you have.
The other side is suggesting to figure out what are the issues with the 4.2 and correct them. Fraser's point of a complete overhaul would be the obvious route for me, given the high mileage. "Rings/bearings/valve job" might do the trick, provided everything else still had life left. This path would, of coarse, solve all the interconnect problems of a swap.
I don't know anything about rebuilding the Jag XK engine in particular, but there are many very excellent members on the Forum who do and would be willing to give any help you might need. There are also many knowledgeable members who are willing to give you any help you'll need if you decide to "lump".
I made a specific and committed decision nearly 4 years ago to build another car, one that I would put a different engine in. I didn't plan for a Jaguar, but the one I found fit the bill and I liked the look. I have a shop, truck-load of tools, unlimited time, and allotted a certain amount of $$$$. But most importantly, I really wanted to do this build (swap included) and my commitment saw me to the end. If you start and then stop anywhere short of completion, everything becomes a waste and you have a completely disabled car.
Anyway, that's my two cents worth based on my experiences with lumping.
Dave
https://www.jaguarforums.com/forum/x...j6-lt1-211881/
Read my thread, if you haven't already. It will bring up some of the issues that need to be solved doing a Chevy lump. There were many more that didn't get posted.
There is about a 60/40 split in advise to fix your existing 4.2 or do a 350 swap. Jagboi64 posted a good set of issues/questions you will need to consider when doing the swap. But it was just the short-list of the many, many things that will need to be addressed. To do yourself proud in a swap, you need time, money, skill, a dedicated place to work, and most importantly, the long term commitment to see it to the end and make it a reliable car, better than what you have.
The other side is suggesting to figure out what are the issues with the 4.2 and correct them. Fraser's point of a complete overhaul would be the obvious route for me, given the high mileage. "Rings/bearings/valve job" might do the trick, provided everything else still had life left. This path would, of coarse, solve all the interconnect problems of a swap.
I don't know anything about rebuilding the Jag XK engine in particular, but there are many very excellent members on the Forum who do and would be willing to give any help you might need. There are also many knowledgeable members who are willing to give you any help you'll need if you decide to "lump".
I made a specific and committed decision nearly 4 years ago to build another car, one that I would put a different engine in. I didn't plan for a Jaguar, but the one I found fit the bill and I liked the look. I have a shop, truck-load of tools, unlimited time, and allotted a certain amount of $$$$. But most importantly, I really wanted to do this build (swap included) and my commitment saw me to the end. If you start and then stop anywhere short of completion, everything becomes a waste and you have a completely disabled car.
Anyway, that's my two cents worth based on my experiences with lumping.
Dave
https://www.jaguarforums.com/forum/x...j6-lt1-211881/
I'm seeing a bit of a contradiction here, you don't have money to pay a mechanic, but you can do an engine swap yourself? I'm in the middle of doing a swap ( to the supercharged XJR engine) and I can tell you it's far more complicated, expensive and time consuming than I ever though it would be, and I had access to cars that had been converted before and took all sorts of photos and was told what the trouble spots were.
If you want it do it for the sake of doing it, that's fine, but expect it to not be quick, simple or cheap.
Another consideration is when you're done you've created an one off orphan that few mechanics will want to work on. A Chevy shop isn't going to touch a Jaguar, and a Jaguar shop knows nothing about Chevys. Which wiring colour codes are you going to use? Jaguar or GM? Where will you cross over, and are you going to draw your own wiring diagram for the car? If you don't, then only you can start tracking wires when something doesn't work. In many ways an engine swap forces you to be your own mechanic because you have created something unique. Unless of course, you have your own mechanic who will do the swap and maintain it, but that's not in the "I have no money" story
There is nothing particularly difficult about the 4.2, if you have sufficient mechanical skills to do a swap, then you have plenty of skills to maintain the 4.2. All the knowledge and help you could want is here.
If you want it do it for the sake of doing it, that's fine, but expect it to not be quick, simple or cheap.
Another consideration is when you're done you've created an one off orphan that few mechanics will want to work on. A Chevy shop isn't going to touch a Jaguar, and a Jaguar shop knows nothing about Chevys. Which wiring colour codes are you going to use? Jaguar or GM? Where will you cross over, and are you going to draw your own wiring diagram for the car? If you don't, then only you can start tracking wires when something doesn't work. In many ways an engine swap forces you to be your own mechanic because you have created something unique. Unless of course, you have your own mechanic who will do the swap and maintain it, but that's not in the "I have no money" story

There is nothing particularly difficult about the 4.2, if you have sufficient mechanical skills to do a swap, then you have plenty of skills to maintain the 4.2. All the knowledge and help you could want is here.
Don't forget that reliability is the entire system, not just the engine. As you are seeing , it's typically not the engine itself that is the problem, but all the supporting things - fuel, ignition and cooling. You would have to do a swap to a very high standard to get close to the reliability of a factory system. Simply changing to a 350 without everything else being properly done isn't a guarantee of increased reliability. As an anecdote, I used to have the V12 version of the car you have. It uses a GM ignition module ( as does your car, it's an HEI ignition system), GM AC compressor, GM transmission (TH400) and GM power steering pump. Every single GM component failed on my car, while the Jaguar engine kept on going, so in my experience "General Motors" and "Reliability" are not words that naturally go together.
You talked about changing the wiring under the hood (why? Is it really that bad?) and hoses, but if you do a swap you're forced to do all that anyway plus a lot more wiring and plumbing to convert the fuel system from EFI back to a carb system. If you're really serious about going to a Chevy engine, going to TBI would be easier as all you would have to change is to a low pressure GM pump.
Parts for the XK engine are easy to get, you can get plenty on Rockauto, or any of the Jaguar specialists, either in the US or UK. I generally order my parts from the UK and they come DHL in 2 days.
I understand that you're comfortable with GM engines, but consider than it might be an easier path to learn the Jaguar and keep it as it was built. All the knowledge and guidance is here and there are plenty of members who will guide you in diagnosing and repair. The engine and EFI is actually very simple, I think much simpler than tuning an American carb - changing metering rods, jets and power valves? Ugh, no thanks, what a nightmare.
I have seen many swaps that kind of, sort of, work but very few that actually have everything work, like the gauges, cruise control or air conditioning. For example, can you calculate driveline angles in multiple planes and fabricate engine and transmission mounts that support the engine at the correct angle relative to the differential? You'll need to, to do a swap that doesn't tear out U joints on the highway.
As was mentioned by another poster, you must have sufficient resources to see it through, including skill, time, money and workspace. If any one of them run out before you're done, then you have a shell that you've sunk a lot into and may end of having to pay to get it taken away.
You talked about changing the wiring under the hood (why? Is it really that bad?) and hoses, but if you do a swap you're forced to do all that anyway plus a lot more wiring and plumbing to convert the fuel system from EFI back to a carb system. If you're really serious about going to a Chevy engine, going to TBI would be easier as all you would have to change is to a low pressure GM pump.
Parts for the XK engine are easy to get, you can get plenty on Rockauto, or any of the Jaguar specialists, either in the US or UK. I generally order my parts from the UK and they come DHL in 2 days.
I understand that you're comfortable with GM engines, but consider than it might be an easier path to learn the Jaguar and keep it as it was built. All the knowledge and guidance is here and there are plenty of members who will guide you in diagnosing and repair. The engine and EFI is actually very simple, I think much simpler than tuning an American carb - changing metering rods, jets and power valves? Ugh, no thanks, what a nightmare.
I have seen many swaps that kind of, sort of, work but very few that actually have everything work, like the gauges, cruise control or air conditioning. For example, can you calculate driveline angles in multiple planes and fabricate engine and transmission mounts that support the engine at the correct angle relative to the differential? You'll need to, to do a swap that doesn't tear out U joints on the highway.
As was mentioned by another poster, you must have sufficient resources to see it through, including skill, time, money and workspace. If any one of them run out before you're done, then you have a shell that you've sunk a lot into and may end of having to pay to get it taken away.
Don't forget that reliability is the entire system, not just the engine. As you are seeing , it's typically not the engine itself that is the problem, but all the supporting things - fuel, ignition and cooling. You would have to do a swap to a very high standard to get close to the reliability of a factory system. Simply changing to a 350 without everything else being properly done isn't a guarantee of increased reliability. As an anecdote, I used to have the V12 version of the car you have. It uses a GM ignition module ( as does your car, it's an HEI ignition system), GM AC compressor, GM transmission (TH400) and GM power steering pump. Every single GM component failed on my car, while the Jaguar engine kept on going, so in my experience "General Motors" and "Reliability" are not words that naturally go together.
You talked about changing the wiring under the hood (why? Is it really that bad?) and hoses, but if you do a swap you're forced to do all that anyway plus a lot more wiring and plumbing to convert the fuel system from EFI back to a carb system. If you're really serious about going to a Chevy engine, going to TBI would be easier as all you would have to change is to a low pressure GM pump.
Parts for the XK engine are easy to get, you can get plenty on Rockauto, or any of the Jaguar specialists, either in the US or UK. I generally order my parts from the UK and they come DHL in 2 days.
I understand that you're comfortable with GM engines, but consider than it might be an easier path to learn the Jaguar and keep it as it was built. All the knowledge and guidance is here and there are plenty of members who will guide you in diagnosing and repair. The engine and EFI is actually very simple, I think much simpler than tuning an American carb - changing metering rods, jets and power valves? Ugh, no thanks, what a nightmare.
I have seen many swaps that kind of, sort of, work but very few that actually have everything work, like the gauges, cruise control or air conditioning. For example, can you calculate driveline angles in multiple planes and fabricate engine and transmission mounts that support the engine at the correct angle relative to the differential? You'll need to, to do a swap that doesn't tear out U joints on the highway.
As was mentioned by another poster, you must have sufficient resources to see it through, including skill, time, money and workspace. If any one of them run out before you're done, then you have a shell that you've sunk a lot into and may end of having to pay to get it taken away.
You talked about changing the wiring under the hood (why? Is it really that bad?) and hoses, but if you do a swap you're forced to do all that anyway plus a lot more wiring and plumbing to convert the fuel system from EFI back to a carb system. If you're really serious about going to a Chevy engine, going to TBI would be easier as all you would have to change is to a low pressure GM pump.
Parts for the XK engine are easy to get, you can get plenty on Rockauto, or any of the Jaguar specialists, either in the US or UK. I generally order my parts from the UK and they come DHL in 2 days.
I understand that you're comfortable with GM engines, but consider than it might be an easier path to learn the Jaguar and keep it as it was built. All the knowledge and guidance is here and there are plenty of members who will guide you in diagnosing and repair. The engine and EFI is actually very simple, I think much simpler than tuning an American carb - changing metering rods, jets and power valves? Ugh, no thanks, what a nightmare.
I have seen many swaps that kind of, sort of, work but very few that actually have everything work, like the gauges, cruise control or air conditioning. For example, can you calculate driveline angles in multiple planes and fabricate engine and transmission mounts that support the engine at the correct angle relative to the differential? You'll need to, to do a swap that doesn't tear out U joints on the highway.
As was mentioned by another poster, you must have sufficient resources to see it through, including skill, time, money and workspace. If any one of them run out before you're done, then you have a shell that you've sunk a lot into and may end of having to pay to get it taken away.










