GT500 Supercharger
Well, I had (4) T-Bird S/Cs, my first was the first year of production. The advice I was given was "change the oil very regularly". I did. I drove them hard, but kept up on the maintenance (not freakishly, just regularly). I traded my first with 119k on it, no service issues (and it was an early release), no blower probs. I did not drive like granny either. The other 4 were nearly identical: 85k, 106k, and 77k with no problems. The moral of the story: change your oil, like you should do anyway!
PS--if you couldn't tell, I loved the blown T-Birds...
PS--if you couldn't tell, I loved the blown T-Birds...
Originally posted by TigerGt@August 11, 2005, 9:13 PM
If, a great question
The problem of the SC of twin screw is the tension that the band does on the axle, provoking that the rolling harms; this problem was seen in the XR7 and Thunderbirds SC of beginning of ' 90s, to the being
If, a great question
The problem of the SC of twin screw is the tension that the band does on the axle, provoking that the rolling harms; this problem was seen in the XR7 and Thunderbirds SC of beginning of ' 90s, to the being
Originally posted by tw0scoops123@August 11, 2005, 10:11 AM
IF it's installed correctly it'll last. But I heard if you just drop a supercharger on without changing certain parts like pulley's, gears, intercooler, etc, it could put too much strain on your engine and drivetrain. If you don't plan on anything but a S/C, you prolly shouldn't be considering this.
IF it's installed correctly it'll last. But I heard if you just drop a supercharger on without changing certain parts like pulley's, gears, intercooler, etc, it could put too much strain on your engine and drivetrain. If you don't plan on anything but a S/C, you prolly shouldn't be considering this.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
austin101385
'10-14 Shelby Mustangs
3
Oct 2, 2015 01:00 PM




