When you say "it's the same bolt pattern as a standard fuel cell", that's what I was getting at with the physical tank mods. Clearance or not, you'd still have to cut a decent-sized hole in the top of the tank and graft in some kind of adapter ring, which would pose problems by itself because the top of the tank isn't flat, go figure. It has several depressed "ribs" that run from front to back. So certainly not impossible, just not what I would consider easy and "bolt-in".
Anyway, hope you got your tuning done and managed to get those miles in!
Thanks!
David
Haha! Yes, we are talking about the same thing in that respect. I already had the expectation of the work to the tank itself. In fact, that's part of the reason it's not in the Falcon already.
There is a 2.25" hole for the main body, then 6x 1/4" holes for the mount. The kit contains all of the flanges to make it work - a C-shaped flange for inside the tank with screws protruding up, then a thick gasket to seal against any metal ribs flattening you don't get 100% flat, then the pump itself.
There's a video at the bottom of the link that shows it installed in a '65 Mustang. It's a BEAST of a fuel pump setup - which is exactly why I want to use it rather than leave it sitting on my shelf. But, it sounds like it's not going to fit the Eagle.
I took the car out yesterday and it runs great once warmed up. Then it started slipping when taking off from a red light. After reading some posts on here, it seems like the transfer case slipped out of gear, and flipping it into 4wd seemed to fix it. I drove it to work in 4wd this morning, and it seems fine. I know ONE of the front yellow vacuum ports on my transfer case actuator is rusted out, but it looked like that's just ambient pressure anyway. The red line looks good, and it definitely shifts into 4wd. When cold, it still stumbles and pops and fights when trying to accelerate. It's a work in progress.