I agree. I had one in a 1980 Chevy luv (yes you read that correctly) my dad built it and it would outrun any other factory vehicles on the road. My 289 was a factory 2 barrel and it would beat any mustang gt and Camaros on the road. It even beat a Grand Prix one time that had a 400ci. When I was racing it on weekends, it never was beaten off the line. It would hook up very well and beat anyone off the line. I sure do miss it.
A 289 powered Ford Falcon GT from Australia competed at Bathurst touring car race and won in 1967.Always liked the 289s they were a sweet revving motor.
I’ve got an xr with a 289. People always talk about the revs. Std as they ran in the gt peak power was at 4800rpm. They had terrible cylinder heads. They take serious porting to get to 400hp
Of course they were canted valves and evenly seperated and spaced headers??? A potentially fire breathing little monster 👹!!! Stick a 5-71 jimmy huffer on it and you've got yourself a sleeping little monster!!!!
You beat me to it, it was Fords first attempt at a serious specific build for the race at Bathurst. It began the era of the Aussie performance vehicles that produced some awesome cars for that period by the then "Big 3," General Motors Holden, Ford, and Chrysler. A great time for motorsport in Ozz, that now has grown into the V8 Supercar class of today.
Thanks for the wonderful 289 history lesson! Like so many other Ford fans, we spent plenty of time with these engines, trying all sorts of tricks to make more HP, especially with the valve train. In the end, they ran a solid 8000 RPM with adequate reliability. What people today tend not to understand is that 330+HP was plenty in a 2300 pound car and would provide superb acceleration, limited only by 4 speed transmissions and yesterday's tires of course. That's 60% the weight of today's Mustang GT, or about the same "Pull in a specific gear" as a modern Mustang GT with 550HP. Folks, don't be fooled, these things were plenty fast when set up properly.
When I was in the Navy in "76 I bought a '66 GT350 from a sailor who was going through a divorce. He had built the car. Had a four-point roll bar, 289 with two 460 Holleys, LeMans cam, GT40 valves, headers, Ford toploader transmission and a Ford 9-inch rear end. He claimed it dynoed at 400 hp. It would turn 8K. Also had a fiberglass hood, front fenders and front grill assembly. It was a blast to drive. Bought it for $4K and sold it six years later for $5K. The cars were just starting to become collectors' items.
We had a 1967, Mustang GT, British Racing Green, black vinyl roof, white sill stripes and.... 289 HiPo with 271 hp. 4 speed. Quite possibly the nicest car I will ever sit in a drive. Thank you for the awesome video.
The 289 v8 Ford was legendary. From the standard car v8 to the racing engine. It was a bulletproof engine. Ford should have kept the engine forever as an engine offering in their lineup throughout the years. No need ever to drop it for the 302.
Got a '67 Cougar with original 2V 289 and lime frost green that someone sprayed candy apple red paint over which mostly just peeled off. I stripped the car down and painted it dark blue metallic and it almost looks black after all these years.
I am so happy to hear great things about the 289. My wife and I are proud owners of a 67 Mustang coupe. I bought it for her as a present, the car was a project and is coming along nice and should be drivable very soon. I rebuilt the original carburetor and transmission and the engine starts and idles so smooth. Can’t wait to drive it.
My best friend in jr high school asked his older brother with his black '62 Falcon Futura convertible (white rag top) to give us rides to and from school! Red leather interior with a 4 speed stick. I was in in heaven for 3 months. What a sweet ride, and the engine & exhaust sounded so cool. This car had the 260 engine.
I was ticked about something and held my '66 289 2+2 at over 8 grand. It didn't blow, so I apologized to it and never did that again. It was stolen and wrecked. I sold it to a racer who put it back together and used the 289 until his tunnel-port 302 was finished. It ran slower with the 302. My neighbor tore his 289 down after abusing the snot out of it. We were shocked to see copper on all the mains as it had been holding good oil pressure and had no low-end noises. The only 'down' side I recall was occassional burned exhaust valves.
In the later 70's, when the 289 got some miles on them, the unleaded fuel started to pound out the valve seats. Also it was common to find the engine with broken piston skirts or cracked ones. I know, I'm a retired engine builder.
While I was in Vietnam, my best friend built a 289/302 combination motor for my '64 Falcon. It was a monster. It showed 331 HP on a dyno. It redlined at 8,000 RPM. We took it to the drag strip a few times and never lost a race. My best time was 113 mph in 11.2 sec. What a great engine.
@@jefferykovacs4211 it was a 289 block with 302 crank, aftermarket rods and pistons, heads done by airflow. Don't remember all the details. It was hard to drive on the street
@@zapa47 Thanks. It was very fast and difficult to keep control of the speed on the streets. I gave it to my sister to drive while she was in high school and sold it after she graduated.
In '68 Ted Haywood was black flagged during Daytona time quals running a 289. He was turning laps speeds of 167.86 mph and back straight around 210. '67 GT350. They said no way, that's a 427 SCJ! Teched it and found it was legal 289. Ted guaranteed 502hp and it pulled 504 @ 9k. I love those tough little monsters.
I built a 289 for my 64 falcon hardtop. Bored 40 over. 480 in 470 ex solid lifter old school crower cam. Hypernetic seal power pistons. 66 289 small chamber heads with 196 175 chevy valves. Full length headers and daul exaust. Offenhauser 360 daul plane intake 1406 edlebrock carb. Hei distributor. 5 speed. 325 rear. Power range was 2200 to 7200. That car pulled hard kinda ran out at the big end.
@@BillyJoBuck I built a 302 in '84 and it was fast One trip was from LA to San Diego in one hour. Wife asked "when did they paint all the solid white lines on the highway?" "They're still dots, Honey"
I made it from Oroville , CA to Boise, ID in 5 hours and 18 minutes in a 66 Mustang GT with a mildly enhanced 289 and 4 speed. I just stopped for fuel. Made a trip from Oroville Ca to Albuquerque NM in 14 hours and 26 minutes in the same car a year later. I was young and not thinking of consequences at the time. But I definitely had a good time and to be honest I never did see a hwy patrolman or any other law enforcement officer during either run. I'm sure they were around but somehow I never ran into any either time.
Too bad 1979 was the last year Ford built some tough. (The F series trucks) The 1963 Hi-Po 289 I had was DEFINITELY the best V8 from Ford I ever owned.
Back then I shifted the top loader when the Tac buried.. In 66 mustang hypo. Had a 70 mustang 302 2bbl. 4 speed. Put a cam, torker manifold, 600 Holly, and it burn the tires hitting 3rd.
That's exactly why it ended up in the Shelby Cobra, Sunbeam Tiger, TVR Griffith, and TVR Tuscan machines. When Chrysler purchased The Rootes Group, makers of the Sunbeam Tiger, there were 70 or so already built with Ford's small block. There was no way Chrysler was going to sell their Sunbeams with Ford power, so they tried to fit their small block 273 into the car. It was a no go without serious rebuilding and modification so that unfortunately lead to the demise of the Tiger.
My first car was a 1966 Mustang coupe with a 289, loved that littl engine. It never let me down. I have had many "windsor" engines fro the 289, 302 and 351. I currently have a 393 stroker in my 1982 GT.
I had a red 63-1/2 Falcon Sprint with the 260 engine. Red interior, 4-spd Hurst shifter adn OE wire wheel hubcap with spinners. I added a true dual exhaust with glass-pack mufflers. I would drag race my buddy who had a sweet '64 Comet Cyclone 289 (4-spd Hurst), which was a slightly larger and heavier car. Our races were all so close it depended on how we shifted. But after 1.5 years of this Tomfoolery, nothing blew up and no one was killed! Those were the days.
My dad had a 1968 Fairlane 500 with the 289. He later had a Fran Torino with a 351C, a Gran Torino Elite with a 351W and then a 302 Thunderbird. I drove all of them a bit and they really moved. Life moved on to 6 cylinders for Dad and my sister and I had vehicles with the 2.3 four-banger. After that, I drove plenty of Ford sizes. No longer driving a Ford. They are not what they used to be...
I own a 1965 Mercury Comet Caliente with a 289 4 speed. Don’t know the history of this engine but the data plate shows it came from the factory with a 2 barrel. A previous owner replaced the intake with an Edlebrock and it had a 60s era Holley 4 barrel which consistently ran rich (and rough) so I replaced it with a 600 CFM Edlebrock carb and I couldn’t be happier. The 289 has plenty of power, efficient, sounds great, and doesn’t burn or leak a drop of oil. Love this engine.
@@warrencollmer3077 Neighbor had a 65 Caliente in that deep burgundy color and Cragar wheels on it.I owned a 64 GTO vert in a similar color ,but those cars were beautiful.
Like the video I have always like the small block ford I am now 77 years young and have 3 of them in restored cars . When I was younger I raced them and won my fare share . Never broke an rod or any big parts. These engines liked high RPM that were they make H.P. Thanks for the video .
The Ford 289 is my favourite motor of all time. with my second being a Chevy 3.8 V6. The 289's were almost impossible to blow up and ran hard. One of the things I really liked about them was the front mount distributor. It made tune ups a lot easier and because it was at the front, unlike the Chevy, and your timing stayed right on when pushed hard because there was no camshaft twisting. Another thing was the Ford small block is 2" narrower that a Chev small block so it will fit a tighter engine bay easier. I had a 1966 Ford Galaxie where the engine was so worn out that at an idle the oil pressure light would come on and that old boat would still happily do a 100 miles per hour for long periods of time without mishap. I drove it to the auto wreckers and they rebuilt the engine and sold it to a customer they never heard from again. Back around 1976 I had a 1948 Pilothouse Fargo panel truck with a 289 K code high performance in it backed up by a 3 speed with overdrive. The diff gearing sucked but I didn't have the money at the time to change it out. One day I was going down the highway at about 60- 65 in third when a buddy of mine in a 1949 Stude pickup pulled up beside me. I looked over and he gave me the nod. So it was dump a cog and away we went. Came shift time we were still neck in neck. When we both peeked out I dropped it into overdrive and hammered it again. He heard my exhaust note change and he just folded while I kept going for a bit and then settled back down to highway speed. When we got into town I needed gas so I pulled into a station and my buddy soon pulled in to see what the hell I was running. Now his Stude pickup had a 454 smogger in it so he was pushing around 250 horse on a good day but it weighed a ton. My little 289 HP was pushing around 270 horse but his weight was negated because a Fargo Pilothouse has all the aerodynamics of a brick. He asked what I was running and I told him, "289 with a three speed manual on the floor." He called bullsh*t so I showed him. He told me, "You know, we were doing almost a 90 miles an hour when we changed into high and got to just over 100 when you shifted into third. That's when I backed off because I knew I was beat." I just nodded and didn't say anything more. You see, what he didn't realize was when he heard my side pipes bark when I picked up the last gear and he backed out, I was really going into overdrive. I couldn't go much faster but the fact that I had "another gear" was enough to psych him out so he quit. It was 20 years later before I told him my secret and all I got was, "Motherf*cker" and we both laughed. I should never have sold that Panel truck but getting married and having kids, well you know how that goes.
My mildly built 289 in my '67 cougar would do 0-60 in 5.5 seconds and on i15 in California at just half throttle I did 130 mph. The tach showed 8200rpm when rev'd. Smooth all the way through the rpm range. One of the things done to the engine was static and dynamic balancing. It seemed to make a huge difference.
FoMoCo Baby!!!! I have owned and built several 302 engines. With the bigger valve springs and something so many people miss, ported and polished heads those things would scream, rev the booger out of them and they would come back for more. Mine were in Mercury cars, Comets and Montegos and left me with many smiles and great memories. I still drive a 351 almost daily but its in my 4x4 pickup as my street days are over. Thanks for a great video and some great toughts of yesterday.
In 1967, here in Australia, the new Ford Falcon GT was equipped with the 289 and 4 speed trans, and won that years Galleher 500 at the Mount Panorama circuit Bathurst. They finished first, second and fifth in this 500 mile race on debut. Top speed was 121 mph. These cars were 4 door sedan with complete interiors, minimal changes and running the stock single exhaust system !!
I can see a fella telling his wife "I'm taking the kids for a ride, be back in a bit" strap the kids in the back with little helmets on and off we go to the races. 😂😂😂❤❤
An old buddy had a 65 K code 4 speed GT Coupe when we were still in high school. It was quick! But anyway, he enlisted in the military after high school and when he came home on leave the car was gone. His Dad had sold it and told him he was gonna kill himself with it, that's why he sold it he said. Dude was pissed!
In high school, my Dad bought the first Falcon Sprint with the 260 ('63-1/2), my buddies had 289 Comet Cyclones. Sweet cars. I read about the 289 HP with its solid lifters but never saw one until about a few years later I was walking in a crosswalk on Main Street in Salem VA, Lots of traffic, so cars were barely moving. Then I heard what sounded like a finely tuned thrashing machine - but with a deep bassy lope to it. It was a Mustang with a 289 HP engine. "zweuw, zweuw, zweuw", then "vroomp, vroomp, vroomp". Must have had headers too. Man, oh man, you haven't lived until you've hear that glorious sound. I knew I had to have a car with a 289 HP engine. But I never did.
You made an excellent, accurate, and informative presentation. I remember reading Carroll Shelby saying the Shelby 289 road race motor was good for 380 horses without sacrificing reliability. That was the justification for the 427. I don’t know how potent the 289s in the GT350s were in B production, but would guess that no one liked to give real numbers. I also recall reading in a 1964-65 Popular Mechanics or similar doing a road test on a new 1965 Mustang with a 289 HiPo, 4-speed, and 4.11s. It was also reported to run a 14 flat. No mention of mods but it was a preproduction car. Despite the contentious relationship between Ford and Shelby, I think Ford learned a lot from road racing and that translated to the 289 - rest of the Windsor series all the way up thru the 95 5.0 HO being reliable, hard to kill motors.
Not real sure about the accuracy. The GT 350s were running in B Production with the Corvette 283, Corvette 327s were in A Production. The Daytona Coupe won LeMans? Not to my knowledge. I once had a VERY good book, The Illustrated Racing History of Ford (1967), which discussed the disappointing efforts of Shelby and the Daytona Coupes in 1965 at LeMans.
motorsportsmarket.com/racecars/1965-b-production-corvette/ I believe the 427 Vettes were put into production A with the 427 Cobras, 289 FIA Cobras, etc. The small block corvettes 283 and 327 were in production B with the GT350 mustangs
In high school in 1970 to 1972 I drove a 1966 Mustang 2+2 GT K code fastback with the hipo 289 and top loader 4 speed! That thing was super quick and fast!,
I just started driving about the time when the mustang went from the 260 V8 to the 289 and the four-speed oh what a wonderful combination I'm lucky to have survived it
Wonderful presentation. Thank you! When I was a teenager, I ate/drank/breathed Mustangs and the 289. It was the car and engine that woke me up and turned me on to cars. Thanks to this, I now know even more about the car and the engine that brought so many joyful dreams to me!
Had a 65 Fastback Mustang with a modified 289. Lot of fun to drive, had to be careful because they would swap ends easily. 289 was a great mid-sized engine, great video, thanx.😃
I am a fan of the small block Windsor engine family. I am high on the 347 and 363 variants offered at Ford Racing. Those are incredible platforms for off the charts performance out of such a small package. Great video Mr. Wheelhouse. I loved it.
Great job on this Podcast. This was a very informative show. I honestly wasn't aware of most of these 289's. That's an incredible little motor that has an amazing history. GREAT JOB!
the small block Ford Windsor has to be the most successful engine of the ages. And with the 351 W version, it has an all new focus in strokers... The little Windsor is still with us today since 1962... What an amazing success story
I for one loved that little 289 Well balanced Fast revving little power house. @ 69 Yrs old I think they were one of the best motors ever made bar none. She's real fine my 289
Nice video. I have a 289 in my Tiger- the early 5 bolt bellhousing block- so it went straight in. I popped a 302 crank in it and some GT-40X heads. Best engine I've ever done.
Great engines! May I offer that with a nice exhaust system, the 289 also had a glorious note. Among the best sounding engines ever. I once owned a little Griffith (TVR) 400 that had the 289 HiPo in an 1,200 lb fiberglass car. That thing scared me at times!
My father bought a 1963 Ford County Squire station wagon, brand new, with a Hi-Po 289, 3 on the tree manual transmission with a overdrive. Fast forward to 1976. I ended up with the wagon and it only had 68k miles. I pulled the 289 and dropped it into a 6 cyl 66 Mustang I had picked up. That 289 was AWESOME compared to a huge amount of 302 Mustangs that I bought shortly after that first 66. It was like comparing apples to oranges. I miss that ol 66!!!
I've been a Ford guy and Mustang owner for almost 40 years, and in all of the shows I've ever been to, there have been a handful of cars that I've seen with a 260, in the flesh. Never have I seen an actual 221 under the hood.
Here in NZ FOMOCO assembled Fairlaines in the 1960's all ex Wndsor Plant in Canada and only 4 doors. If it wasn't for Canada being a Commonwealth country like us we would have got no US based Fords because of tarriffs. The 62 through to 64 Fairlanes were real popular and commonly known here as a Ford "Compact" and were the right size for our roads. The 62 came with the 221engine while the 63 & 64 mainly got the 260.@@romemancer7905
In the vancouver area ive seen a handful of the 221 and a fair number of the 260’s at car shows. In the ‘60’s there were quite a few local ford dealerships which may account for that.
Definitely. Had a 65 mustang. 289 twin electric fell pumps, 850 holly, 5000 foot pound clutch, 411 rear end, Trac bars, 3 quarter race cam offenhouser blueprints. Fiberglass in the right places. In short, nothing ever touched me, no big block could outrun it in the quarter. And those engines. Don't blow up, they run great. I'm old now, I'll never forget that sweet car. Looks like the future of the young, will be riding skate boards. Sad.
Back in high school I had a 63 falcon Sprint convertible automatic I swapped the 260 out put a 289 in it with a little hotter cam intake carburetor headers and I beat the snot out of that car all through high School. It never let me down. Great little car now that I'm older I wish I still kept it the one car that I wish I still kept and I didn't but I had mechanical issues not with the drivetrain but with the car basically falling apart around the engine transmission and rear end LOL LOL. When you get to the point that you're 19 years old and you don't have the resources to keep buying new parts or replacing them or having them fixed I finally had a call today. Sad to say but that day came in 1979 or 1980. Thank you keep up the great work on these older Fords love it
@@Deucealive75 My uncle, who was a Ford mechanic, warned me early on about them overheating in warmer climates. Used a 3 core radiator and a 180 degree thermostat. Never had issues
My first car was a 1965 Mustang with a 289 V8. Since then and up until 2 years ago I had a 1969 Mustang Fastback with a 351W in it and a Shelby style suspension. It was sweet in the canyons! Those motors were bulletproof. I also had during some of that time an '88 GT 5ltr with a manual transmission. Made me anxious in LA traffic. It was a rocket.
I built my GT40 replica with a strong 351 C4v and was quite happy until i decided to build a peppy 289 for it. The differenc was nothing short of phenominal.. The weight alone conpletely transformed the handling of the car. I could carry possibly 20mph more into the bends and its willingness to rev really suits the lightweight car.. Its limited to 7500rpm and will drive like that all day and all night. It pulls like a train in all gears, will touch 200 mph if the track is long enough and sounds simply amazing.. So glad i decided to swap. Took me a few years to find a good 289 block being in the UK, but was worth the effort...
Great little engine, have one in my 65 comet. People that don't know much about it seem a bit disappointed when I say 289 and not something bigger but I just smile.
Thanks for the history on the 289w. A few milestones from Australia you can add. Ford XR GT won Bathurst. Geoghegan's 1965 Mustang 289w is the most successful race car in Australia, it won 68 races from 74 race starts. He also followed up using the 289w at first but changed to a 302w in his 1967 Mustang GTA, not sure of races and wins for the 289w, I'm certain this car is the 3rd most successful race car in Australia with 89 wins from 144 starts, behind Allan Moffat's 69 Mustang Trans Am 302Boss 101 wins from 151 starts.
My stepdad showed up with a 65 Hypo 289 in 1969. He worked fir Fairchild in Santa Clara. It had posi, 4 soeed, pony interior, tge front end was akreadu hammered in just 4 short years. Think he drove it hard in to the turns. We moved to Portland Me. a few tears later, he put a telephone pole mud way into the engine compartment coming home from drinking rolling along on Portland Me. winter ice. Loved it, my mom was scared of it, had tried to out ut in the garage in Maine, dug two wheel holes in our asphalt driveway cuz it had studded tires. Studded tires will do some work on old asphalt with a 289 271 hp.
Man oh man those clips of Riverside bring back some memories. I remember seeing a poster of a guy with the hood up on his Corvette and a Cobra in the background with lots of smoke coming out of the engine and the caption was "happiness is a Corvette owner seeing the only Cobra blow his engine in Saturday practice."
I had a 1964 Galaxie and Ford custom( really a 2 door post Galaxie) with standard 289s. It was suprising how well those cars moved those big cars, especially on the freeway.
I am getting a Merc Cyclone together soon and have already built a 289 that should work out to be about 330hp. Plenty enough to go out and have serious fun and reliability, but still have enough uumpf to get the job done if you put the spurs to it. Really looking forward to it. Thanks for a well done and informative video.
My Dad bought a 1966 Fairlane 500 with a C-Code 289 coupled to a manual three-on-the-tree transmission. I spent a lot of time in the backseat of that Fairlane traveling across the country. The 289 was bulletproof. I think it had @ 130,000 miles by the time it was sold in the early 1980s. I still run across the occasional '66 Fairlane with the 289. Amazing that such an awesome engine had such a short run.
Nice to hear. My dad bought a new ‘66 fairlane wagon with 289 2v and 3 on the tree. I was with him when he bought it and i still have it today. Just wish I had more time to drive it.
I was raised in Southern Michigan, I witnessed several cars from different manufacturers with different motors, 289 Fords, 283 Chevy, 327 Chevy, 318 Mopar. Serious fun. I ended up with a 302 camero with all the bells and whistles. Not saying what was best, just what I saw, all were impressive.
An interesting story about the Sunbeam Tiger was that it started out as the Alpine with a 1.7 litre 4. It featured in the start of some of the episodes of Get Smart. Sunbeam was an old British company that was bought by the Rootes Group, a British version of America's big 3 in that they bought up several other car manufacturers in the UK. Amongst the other companies were Hillman, Humber & Commer trucks & vans. Carroll Shelby fitted (shoe horned) a Ford 260 into the engine bay of the Alpine to great success & followed it with the 289. A few years later, Chrysler bought the Rootes Group & discontinued the Tiger because of competitor Ford's engine, but didn't resurrect the Tiger with one of their own V8s, maybe because the smallest one wouldn't fit in the small engine bay of the Alpine without major chassis surgery & were probably too heavy anyway, compared to the 260 & 289. Even the Tiger needed a new transmission tunnel because of the bigger gearbox. Pity.
@elrofudbucker6806 - You're exactly right. The Chrysler 273 engine wouldn't fit without extensive mods so they dropped the Tiger. A high school friend of mine told me his Dad bought a Tiger II (289) and put a mild cam, bigger Holley and some headers on it. He could yank the front wheels a couple inches off the ground with a strong start! What a sleeper! 🤠
Just spent some time (and $) finally giving my "wife's" '65 289 the attention and love it deserves. Should be picking her up today if all goes well. New Edelbrock 4 barrel, hedman headers with two and a half inch pipes out through Flowmaster 40's, some paint and a bunch of other little goodies. I am so friggin' excited to pick her up 😎
The problem the 289 had, besides only being a two bolt main (i have heard that the LeMans engined 289 GT40's came apart so much in testing that they tried block girdles but those didn't help much, and finally Ford made some specialized 4 bolt main castings for some of the factory sponsored 289's GT40's but have never been able to confirm if that was true or not) was the heads didn't breath very good...even the fabled HIPO heads had the same valve sizes as the C code/2 barrel heads. the head porting gurus at the speed shop in Burbank that were right beside Carol's original shop did wonders with porting and resizing the valves which resulted in the Shelby competition 289's dynoing in the mid/high 300 HP range with some over 400 HP. The final trick was running the chevy 1.92 intake valves (the 2.02's would not fit) with significant porting.
You are correct, and in a way, in my opinion, that's adds to the great story. The heads never did flow that much, and yet they still achieved so much! As I mentioned it was designed originally for economy. Pretty darn cool I think.
@@Wheelhouse812 I agree it certainly was the little engine that could...i owned a '65 Hipo K code fastback mustang and I had a buddy in HS who had a i believe '63 comet with a 260 hipo that was a running car. I just never understood why Ford didn't match the Chevy SB in performance attributes: 4 bolt main engines and much better flowing heads, really until the Boss 302/Cleveland 351 engines.
@@colinnicols5387 The original 390 high performance in I believe '63 was pretty much a baby 427 and was a strong engine...the 390 of the late 60's was another story...I beat a buddy with a '68 Mustang Gt with a 390 4 barrel dual exhaust with my '67 LeMans with the 328 High Output engine
@@Wheelhouse812 I owned a '65 Hipo Mustang (K code) so the 289 holds a special place in my heart, but really what did it achieve? Growing up, the chevy SB's were always much faster in my neck of the woods.
@10:10 I'm sure it's high-temp paint, but would you take the exhaust manifold mating surfaces on the heads down to bare iron, or just bolt-up the gaskets as is?
Great to hear the history of the 289. Never had one but I was always in love with the 1966 Mustang 2+2 HiPo with the beautiful Trumpet Tip Louvered Exhaust Pipes. Thanks for your hard work and sharing your knowledge ! ! Absolutely Excellent presentation ! I read in a Special Edition magazine once that Carroll Shelby initially did not want to do the Mustang upgrade for Ford. Which eventually became the Shelby Mustang and the rest is history ! As they say. If your familiar with that it would be a great topic for you to cover.
@@Wheelhouse812 Thanks for the reply. I lost the magazine in one of the Florida hurricanes. If I still had it I would arrange for you to get a copy pf the article. Good day Sir !
Best engine have used them since the 60s currently very reliable hard to hurt have pissed off many Big blocks no matter what the brand love the video good info a lot of people do not realize thanks for sharing
Many years ago I had a compact Fairlane with a 289 and C4 trans, the engine had a Holley 600 4 barrel carby and headers tuned for low to mid range torque. This car would accelerate very quick off the mark and ran easily to 7000 rpm. Great little motor.
i owned a 1966 Mustang With a k code 289 and did a lot of Street racing back in the late 1960's, With the Cobra intake headers and a Holley carb. I walked on a bunch of big block Cars, including 390 mustang s and 389 GTO's. My car had 3.89 pos it jumped out of the hole hard. My best time at a 4000 foot altitude strip was 13.2 at 103 mph.
My Uncle Charley had a 66 Mustang GT with a HiPo289 4 speed. It was a blast to drive. I had a 64 Fairlane with a 289 2 barrel. I loved that car and to this day I regret selling it.
289 with the forged crankshaft was a beast. I had a 1966 Mustang GT 4 speed. I wonder why you didn't mention the cast crankshaft vs the forged crankshaft
What caught my eye in the HS parking lot through the last 2 years before graduating was a 69 Mach 1 , the owner I had never met but till later , what was striking about the car was the rather raw sound it was producing . A lift and duration you could hear from a distance . It was a built 302 with all the tricks , 351 heads , crazy cam that would smoke the tires at will . I was successful in buying the car , later to a complete restore , made a few more improvements and cleaned the vehicle to my minds vision .
When I was a kid my dad had a 69 mach1 428 super cobrajet R-code with the 4 speed top loader and 4.30(I believe it was) rear gears. It was amazing. He kicks himself over selling it in the early 2000's for like 13k in great condition. Now that is one of the most rare ford built mustangs ever made and worth 100k+
@@huntermckinley593just doesn't bear thinking about does it. At least not too often that's for sure. If we knew what we know, back then, we would have known.
67 Mustang 289, 4 speed 390 rated trans, 4 barrel 550 carb and headers I added, plus better tires. My first car, driven 22 hours non-stop to get back home when young. Miss that girl!
Great vid new subscriber, I worked at DST also known as Dearborn Steel Tubing from 1968 to 1972 and we were building the performance intake manifolds for Ford, I built a few of 289s back then because we had access to all of the parts in the the Total Performance Catolog, sure was great back then and it is a great engine!
I had a friend that had a 64 Comet that had a 289 Engine, he drag raced this car almost non stop, that engine would just not Give Up-probably one of the best Engines of it's era....
I had a 289 in a 63 Galaxie wagon, a 64 Galaxie sedan, a 66 Mustang, and a 64 Fairlane 500 (High Pro). Loved that engine! My sisters neighbor had one in a sprint car!
This is very well done. A great overview highlighting all the good stuff! I bleed Ford blue, a multiple Ford GT owner among others and a Ford Racing hobby historian. Keep them coming. And yes, "Lets go Brandon".
I have been a Ford guy since the 70's, and never heard of a Windsor family of engines until the last 20 years or so. Back then only engine classed as a Windsor was the 351.
I’m running a 10:1 331 in my Bronco. I consider it Fords 327 at 30 over. I get 15 mpg with a lead foot and that’s through a 9” rear with 3.73 gears on 35” mud terrains. Not a race car but it’s a manual and does 85 mph on freeway at 3100 rpm.
Great hist❤ory lesson, learned something new. I am a new follower. The first car I had was a 67 with a 289. Sold it when I went in the military. Wish I had been able to keep it.
Those small blocks had reasonable economy. I had a 1965 Impala with a 283 engine, 3 on the tree and overdrive. It got 25mpg on the highway and 22 average.
I put a 289 4v in a 71 f100 4x4 that had a 300 inline 6 originally. That little 289 has lived in that old pickup flawlessly for over 20 years now and has run the same as the day i put it in ever since. A bunch more power and much better fuel economy than the 300 inline 6 ever had. Ive driven that truck well over 50k in the 20 years and it had over 80k on it when i dropped it in the truck. Still does great and fires up immediately every time
5:09 Hey, the Super Mustang (middle left)! Which was recently found and fully restored by Don Lyons, the same guy that restored Mario Andretti’s rookie car in the IMAX ‘Super Speedway’. My house is in the background shot as the car was being started. Both cars built in the shop next door to my house. I watched them both come together piece by piece.
I had a '63 Econoline I used for construction work and camping in the mountains. 170 ci online six. Never had a bit of problem with that 6, but it was a dog in the mountains. Sold it about 19 years ago. Fun times in that thing.
I had one that took a beating but would not die. Several others Ford sixes that were problem free. Best motor from that era. I had also had Chevy sixes but all had head valves and wrapped heads and most had distributor problems.
Wheelhouse, thank you very good video. Learned a lot from your video. The 289 was the engine of my youth, in the 70s. I got the old family 63 Galaxie 500 (it most of had one of the first ones in it) with one had great fun driving it to the beach and around town. My friend had a 260 in I think it was a Comet and it was great except when it took a hard left turn down hill. We learned a lot about auto repair and engine mods. Later when I went to College, my roommate raced Falcons with built 289s and had one he drove, they were wicked fast.
HS friend owned a black ‘66 Bronco with a 289 Hypo in it.327 Chevelles couldn’t touch it.I made a lot of side(gas) money for my GTO,on dozens of street races.
I had a 225 hp 289 in my 66 mustang GT. Fresh out of high school (1976) we hooked up a towbar to my friends VW bug & headed to LA Cali. On the way back home (Albuquerque, N.M) we heard the mustang started knocking in Needles California. with no oil pressure we started running 90w gear oil & that little 289 mustang still got us home. 💕👍 (towing a VW)
I used 289 heads on a 260 to great effect. 7000 redline and 300 hp. I had a few other tricks like a windage tray, Rhodes lifters and some head porting. Flow is the key to making power. Best results were with a single plane 4bbl using a 450CFM Holley. The 260 originally had small intake valves and ports but it pulled solid to 6700 RPM with 289 heads and the larger intake path.. I used a Crane dual pattern cam , don't recall the specs. I had one fast Falcon.
I owned a 289 briefly... Blew it up by running it out of oil. Lost the motor, and the F-600 it came in. Broke my heart. Won't go into the whole length of the story, but it haunts me to this day.
I think the most underappreciated Ford factory engine would be the '58 410/400 Mercury Super Marauder (First 400 bhp domestic V8). Most underappreciated Shelby factory engine would be the 1962 260/260. Most under-rated engine was likely the 1970 351C 4V which actually made 20% over factory rated power according to engine dyno test.
The 289 was one of Fords best engines.
I had one in a 66 Fairlane, loved that car.
I'd love to get a Cobra with a 289.
351 winsor in my truck , ford dependability sadly, will probably never be the same.
I agree. I had one in a 1980 Chevy luv (yes you read that correctly) my dad built it and it would outrun any other factory vehicles on the road. My 289 was a factory 2 barrel and it would beat any mustang gt and Camaros on the road. It even beat a Grand Prix one time that had a 400ci. When I was racing it on weekends, it never was beaten off the line. It would hook up very well and beat anyone off the line. I sure do miss it.
@@Huckleberry54 Ford engine in a Chevy? Now that’s definitely different 👍
A 289 powered Ford Falcon GT from Australia competed at Bathurst touring car race and won in 1967.Always liked the 289s they were a sweet revving motor.
I’ve got an xr with a 289. People always talk about the revs. Std as they ran in the gt peak power was at 4800rpm. They had terrible cylinder heads. They take serious porting to get to 400hp
Of course they were canted valves and evenly seperated and spaced headers???
A potentially fire breathing little monster 👹!!!
Stick a 5-71 jimmy huffer on it and you've got yourself a sleeping little monster!!!!
The combustion chamber design riveled by the 460-429-and chevy big block not to mention others!!!
@@kimnielsenthewordyvikingett159 289s are inline valve wedge chambers…
You beat me to it, it was Fords first attempt at a serious specific build for the race at Bathurst. It began the era of the Aussie performance vehicles that produced some awesome cars for that period by the then "Big 3," General Motors Holden, Ford, and Chrysler.
A great time for motorsport in Ozz, that now has grown into the V8 Supercar class of today.
Thanks for the wonderful 289 history lesson! Like so many other Ford fans, we spent plenty of time with these engines, trying all sorts of tricks to make more HP, especially with the valve train. In the end, they ran a solid 8000 RPM with adequate reliability. What people today tend not to understand is that 330+HP was plenty in a 2300 pound car and would provide superb acceleration, limited only by 4 speed transmissions and yesterday's tires of course. That's 60% the weight of today's Mustang GT, or about the same "Pull in a specific gear" as a modern Mustang GT with 550HP. Folks, don't be fooled, these things were plenty fast when set up properly.
Mustang more like 2650#, My '65 Comet Caliente hardtop 289, was 2781# (about the same as my Mustang II V6). 289 Cobra was about 2200#, 427, 2500#.
Had 1967 cougar 289 . A small block eater .
Honda stationery clone
engine
😊😊😊
When I was in the Navy in "76 I bought a '66 GT350 from a sailor who was going through a divorce. He had built the car. Had a four-point roll bar, 289 with two 460 Holleys, LeMans cam, GT40 valves, headers, Ford toploader transmission and a Ford 9-inch rear end. He claimed it dynoed at 400 hp. It would turn 8K. Also had a fiberglass hood, front fenders and front grill assembly. It was a blast to drive. Bought it for $4K and sold it six years later for $5K. The cars were just starting to become collectors' items.
We had a 1967, Mustang GT, British Racing Green, black vinyl roof, white sill stripes and.... 289 HiPo with 271 hp. 4 speed. Quite possibly the nicest car I will ever sit in a drive. Thank you for the awesome video.
Unless you actually painted your car BRG, the green color of your 1967 Mustang was Dark Moss Green.
The 289 v8 Ford was legendary. From the standard car v8 to the racing engine. It was a bulletproof engine. Ford should have kept the engine forever as an engine offering in their lineup throughout the years. No need ever to drop it for the 302.
my Dad has had a green K code 66 fastback for the last 30ish years. I believe that year it was called Ivy Green Metallic.
Got a '67 Cougar with original 2V 289 and lime frost green that someone sprayed candy apple red paint over which mostly just peeled off. I stripped the car down and painted it dark blue metallic and it almost looks black after all these years.
@@RollingRigTraction 67 cougar is underappreciated.
I am so happy to hear great things about the 289. My wife and I are proud owners of a 67 Mustang coupe. I bought it for her as a present, the car was a project and is coming along nice and should be drivable very soon. I rebuilt the original carburetor and transmission and the engine starts and idles so smooth. Can’t wait to drive it.
Heaven was driving my 289 powered 63 Futura and 4 speed to the country on weekends...what a sweet car...as a young guy growing up in the 80s...
My best friend in jr high school asked his older brother with his black '62 Falcon Futura convertible (white rag top) to give us rides to and from school! Red leather interior with a 4 speed stick. I was in in heaven for 3 months. What a sweet ride, and the engine & exhaust sounded so cool. This car had the 260 engine.
Back in the late ‘60’s and into the ‘70’s this engine was legendary for durability.
260 even more so - and the 302 wasn't so bad itself.
GREAT long-lasting engine series for their day.
I was ticked about something and held my '66 289 2+2 at over 8 grand. It didn't blow, so I apologized to it and never did that again. It was stolen and wrecked. I sold it to a racer who put it back together and used the 289 until his tunnel-port 302 was finished. It ran slower with the 302. My neighbor tore his 289 down after abusing the snot out of it. We were shocked to see copper on all the mains as it had been holding good oil pressure and had no low-end noises. The only 'down' side I recall was occassional burned exhaust valves.
In the later 70's, when the 289 got some miles on them, the unleaded fuel started to pound out the valve seats. Also it was common to find the engine with broken piston skirts or cracked ones.
I know, I'm a retired engine builder.
@@busterdee8228Stock valve springs won't support 8,000. RPM.
I found. No other engine that could take more punishment and never blow up. Even when pushing some nitro though it.
While I was in Vietnam, my best friend built a 289/302 combination motor for my '64 Falcon. It was a monster. It showed 331 HP on a dyno. It redlined at 8,000 RPM. We took it to the drag strip a few times and never lost a race. My best time was 113 mph in 11.2 sec. What a great engine.
Was it 302 rods with 289 crank?
@@jefferykovacs4211 it was a 289 block with 302 crank, aftermarket rods and pistons, heads done by airflow. Don't remember all the details. It was hard to drive on the street
@@darrellyoung9586 I figured I did the same thing to my circle track / fig8 car things wound up rt now
Jeez man. That was super fast even in the 90s and 00s.
@@zapa47 Thanks. It was very fast and difficult to keep control of the speed on the streets. I gave it to my sister to drive while she was in high school and sold it after she graduated.
In '68 Ted Haywood was black flagged during Daytona time quals running a 289. He was turning laps speeds of 167.86 mph and back straight around 210. '67 GT350. They said no way, that's a 427 SCJ! Teched it and found it was legal 289. Ted guaranteed 502hp and it pulled 504 @ 9k. I love those tough little monsters.
Interesting fact 😀
I built a 289 for my 64 falcon hardtop. Bored 40 over. 480 in 470 ex solid lifter old school crower cam. Hypernetic seal power pistons. 66 289 small chamber heads with 196 175 chevy valves. Full length headers and daul exaust. Offenhauser 360 daul plane intake 1406 edlebrock carb. Hei distributor. 5 speed. 325 rear. Power range was 2200 to 7200. That car pulled hard kinda ran out at the big end.
@@BillyJoBuck I built a 302 in '84 and it was fast One trip was from LA to San Diego in one hour. Wife asked "when did they paint all the solid white lines on the highway?" "They're still dots, Honey"
The traffic was around 90 mph. They looked parked at top end. You watch every head at those speeds.
I made it from Oroville , CA to Boise, ID in 5 hours and 18 minutes in a 66 Mustang GT with a mildly enhanced 289 and 4 speed. I just stopped for fuel. Made a trip from Oroville Ca to Albuquerque NM in 14 hours and 26 minutes in the same car a year later. I was young and not thinking of consequences at the time. But I definitely had a good time and to be honest I never did see a hwy patrolman or any other law enforcement officer during either run. I'm sure they were around but somehow I never ran into any either time.
I've had from the 260 to the 351 , never had a problem with none of them 👍 back then built Ford tough meant something. 👍🇺🇲
I still have a 221V8
Built Ford tough 👍
Fix or repair daily 😂😂😂
Too bad 1979 was the last year Ford built some tough. (The F series trucks) The 1963 Hi-Po 289 I had was DEFINITELY the best V8 from Ford I ever owned.
@@johnmartin6854- Jealous Chevy fans need not reply! LOL
289 and 302 were the engines that hooked me on small blocks
Back then I shifted the top loader when the Tac buried..
In 66 mustang hypo. Had a 70 mustang 302 2bbl. 4 speed. Put a cam, torker manifold, 600 Holly, and it burn the tires hitting 3rd.
@@ironworkerfxr7105 today I'm daily driving a 400 9.7 compression Schnieder 284/294 cam Weiand American made manifold and 780 Holley
The 289 was a great engine. Easy to tune and really reliable. And it would fit into any compact car without compromising balance and handling.
That's exactly why it ended up in the Shelby Cobra, Sunbeam Tiger, TVR Griffith, and TVR Tuscan machines. When Chrysler purchased The Rootes Group, makers of the Sunbeam Tiger, there were 70 or so already built with Ford's small block. There was no way Chrysler was going to sell their Sunbeams with Ford power, so they tried to fit their small block 273 into the car. It was a no go without serious rebuilding and modification so that unfortunately lead to the demise of the Tiger.
My first car was a 1966 Mustang coupe with a 289, loved that littl engine. It never let me down. I have had many "windsor" engines fro the 289, 302 and 351. I currently have a 393 stroker in my 1982 GT.
Had a 289 in my 65 Fairlane 500. Loved that engine.
Me too! With a 3 on the tree!
I had a red 63-1/2 Falcon Sprint with the 260 engine. Red interior, 4-spd Hurst shifter adn OE wire wheel hubcap with spinners. I added a true dual exhaust with glass-pack mufflers. I would drag race my buddy who had a sweet '64 Comet Cyclone 289 (4-spd Hurst), which was a slightly larger and heavier car. Our races were all so close it depended on how we shifted. But after 1.5 years of this Tomfoolery, nothing blew up and no one was killed! Those were the days.
My dad had a 1968 Fairlane 500 with the 289. He later had a Fran Torino with a 351C, a Gran Torino Elite with a 351W and then a 302 Thunderbird. I drove all of them a bit and they really moved. Life moved on to 6 cylinders for Dad and my sister and I had vehicles with the 2.3 four-banger. After that, I drove plenty of Ford sizes. No longer driving a Ford. They are not what they used to be...
I did too! What an awesome car, 4 speed and all. FAST!
I own a 1965 Mercury Comet Caliente with a 289 4 speed. Don’t know the history of this engine but the data plate shows it came from the factory with a 2 barrel. A previous owner replaced the intake with an Edlebrock and it had a 60s era Holley 4 barrel which consistently ran rich (and rough) so I replaced it with a 600 CFM Edlebrock carb and I couldn’t be happier. The 289 has plenty of power, efficient, sounds great, and doesn’t burn or leak a drop of oil. Love this engine.
600 Holley was all you needed. 650 double-pumper if it was modified.
Had a 289 in my Mercury Comet a snail could run faster
Fuck yeah!!!!!!
@@warrencollmer3077 Neighbor had a 65 Caliente in that deep burgundy color and Cragar wheels on it.I owned a 64 GTO vert in a similar color ,but those cars were beautiful.
@@larrycole4438operator maintenance failure. Gotta be running proper and on all eight
Like the video I have always like the small block ford I am now 77 years young and have 3 of them in restored cars . When I was younger I raced them and won my fare share . Never broke an rod or any big parts. These engines liked high RPM that were they make H.P. Thanks for the video .
My first car was an 89 mustang GT and that lil 5.0 ho would rev
Yes but we found out all about Pushrod Savers back then. Oh and fixing those pesky valve seals too.
The Ford 289 is my favourite motor of all time. with my second being a Chevy 3.8 V6. The 289's were almost impossible to blow up and ran hard. One of the things I really liked about them was the front mount distributor. It made tune ups a lot easier and because it was at the front, unlike the Chevy, and your timing stayed right on when pushed hard because there was no camshaft twisting. Another thing was the Ford small block is 2" narrower that a Chev small block so it will fit a tighter engine bay easier. I had a 1966 Ford Galaxie where the engine was so worn out that at an idle the oil pressure light would come on and that old boat would still happily do a 100 miles per hour for long periods of time without mishap. I drove it to the auto wreckers and they rebuilt the engine and sold it to a customer they never heard from again.
Back around 1976 I had a 1948 Pilothouse Fargo panel truck with a 289 K code high performance in it backed up by a 3 speed with overdrive. The diff gearing sucked but I didn't have the money at the time to change it out. One day I was going down the highway at about 60- 65 in third when a buddy of mine in a 1949 Stude pickup pulled up beside me. I looked over and he gave me the nod. So it was dump a cog and away we went. Came shift time we were still neck in neck. When we both peeked out I dropped it into overdrive and hammered it again. He heard my exhaust note change and he just folded while I kept going for a bit and then settled back down to highway speed. When we got into town I needed gas so I pulled into a station and my buddy soon pulled in to see what the hell I was running. Now his Stude pickup had a 454 smogger in it so he was pushing around 250 horse on a good day but it weighed a ton. My little 289 HP was pushing around 270 horse but his weight was negated because a Fargo Pilothouse has all the aerodynamics of a brick. He asked what I was running and I told him, "289 with a three speed manual on the floor." He called bullsh*t so I showed him. He told me, "You know, we were doing almost a 90 miles an hour when we changed into high and got to just over 100 when you shifted into third. That's when I backed off because I knew I was beat." I just nodded and didn't say anything more. You see, what he didn't realize was when he heard my side pipes bark when I picked up the last gear and he backed out, I was really going into overdrive. I couldn't go much faster but the fact that I had "another gear" was enough to psych him out so he quit. It was 20 years later before I told him my secret and all I got was, "Motherf*cker" and we both laughed.
I should never have sold that Panel truck but getting married and having kids, well you know how that goes.
"My fenders was clickin' the guard-rail post, the guy beside me was white as a ghost......" 🙂
Man…. I enjoyed that immensely ! Interesting 👍😎
Great story
@@TonyGarrett-p1c Hot Rod Lincln
My mildly built 289 in my '67 cougar would do 0-60 in 5.5 seconds and on i15 in California at just half throttle I did 130 mph. The tach showed 8200rpm when rev'd. Smooth all the way through the rpm range. One of the things done to the engine was static and dynamic balancing. It seemed to make a huge difference.
FoMoCo Baby!!!! I have owned and built several 302 engines. With the bigger valve springs and something so many people miss, ported and polished heads those things would scream, rev the booger out of them and they would come back for more. Mine were in Mercury cars, Comets and Montegos and left me with many smiles and great memories. I still drive a 351 almost daily but its in my 4x4 pickup as my street days are over. Thanks for a great video and some great toughts of yesterday.
In 1967, here in Australia, the new Ford Falcon GT was equipped with the 289 and 4 speed trans, and won that years Galleher 500 at the Mount Panorama circuit Bathurst. They finished first, second and fifth in this 500 mile race on debut. Top speed was 121 mph. These cars were 4 door sedan with complete interiors, minimal changes and running the stock single exhaust system !!
I can see a fella telling his wife "I'm taking the kids for a ride, be back in a bit" strap the kids in the back with little helmets on and off we go to the races. 😂😂😂❤❤
My 289high performance in my 65 Mustang fastback was truly an Amazing engine. Dad bought it new.
An old buddy had a 65 K code 4 speed GT Coupe when we were still in high school. It was quick! But anyway, he enlisted in the military after high school and when he came home on leave the car was gone. His Dad had sold it and told him he was gonna kill himself with it, that's why he sold it he said. Dude was pissed!
@@oneninerniner3427K codes are pretty rare mate, very sought after now.
In high school, my Dad bought the first Falcon Sprint with the 260 ('63-1/2), my buddies had 289 Comet Cyclones. Sweet cars. I read about the 289 HP with its solid lifters but never saw one until about a few years later I was walking in a crosswalk on Main Street in Salem VA, Lots of traffic, so cars were barely moving. Then I heard what sounded like a finely tuned thrashing machine - but with a deep bassy lope to it. It was a Mustang with a 289 HP engine. "zweuw, zweuw, zweuw", then "vroomp, vroomp, vroomp". Must have had headers too. Man, oh man, you haven't lived until you've hear that glorious sound. I knew I had to have a car with a 289 HP engine. But I never did.
You made an excellent, accurate, and informative presentation. I remember reading Carroll Shelby saying the Shelby 289 road race motor was good for 380 horses without sacrificing reliability. That was the justification for the 427. I don’t know how potent the 289s in the GT350s were in B production, but would guess that no one liked to give real numbers. I also recall reading in a 1964-65 Popular Mechanics or similar doing a road test on a new 1965 Mustang with a 289 HiPo, 4-speed, and 4.11s. It was also reported to run a 14 flat. No mention of mods but it was a preproduction car. Despite the contentious relationship between Ford and Shelby, I think Ford learned a lot from road racing and that translated to the 289 - rest of the Windsor series all the way up thru the 95 5.0 HO being reliable, hard to kill motors.
Not real sure about the accuracy.
The GT 350s were running in B
Production with the Corvette 283, Corvette 327s were in A
Production.
The Daytona Coupe won LeMans? Not to my knowledge. I once had a VERY good book, The
Illustrated Racing History of Ford
(1967), which discussed the disappointing efforts of Shelby and the Daytona Coupes in 1965
at LeMans.
@@jimstrict-998 the Daytona won the GT class LeMans - 1965 I think when the GT40s that were the main event all quit throughout the race.
simeonemuseum.org/collection/1964-shelby-cobra-daytona-coupe/#:~:text=In%201964%2C%20Ferrari%20barely%20won,variety%20of%20other%20important%20races.
motorsportsmarket.com/racecars/1965-b-production-corvette/
I believe the 427 Vettes were put into production A with the 427 Cobras, 289 FIA Cobras, etc. The small block corvettes 283 and 327 were in production B with the GT350 mustangs
I've always loved my 289 2bbl with a T 10 4Spd in my 65 mustang. Still the quickest reving engine I've found !
In high school in 1970 to 1972 I drove a 1966 Mustang 2+2 GT K code fastback with the hipo 289 and top loader 4 speed! That thing was super quick and fast!,
The sound nothing beats the sound of a 289
I just started driving about the time when the mustang went from the 260 V8 to the 289 and the four-speed oh what a wonderful combination I'm lucky to have survived it
Late '65?
Wonderful presentation. Thank you! When I was a teenager, I ate/drank/breathed Mustangs and the 289. It was the car and engine that woke me up and turned me on to cars. Thanks to this, I now know even more about the car and the engine that brought so many joyful dreams to me!
That Was Great! A Good History Lesson For Those Who Care. My First Car Was A '66 Mustang Fastback, 3-Speed, 289 & I Got It For $275. Thank You.
Had a 65 Fastback Mustang with a modified 289. Lot of fun to drive, had to be careful because they would swap ends easily. 289 was a great mid-sized engine, great video, thanx.😃
I am a fan of the small block Windsor engine family. I am high on the 347 and 363 variants offered at Ford Racing. Those are incredible platforms for off the charts performance out of such a small package. Great video Mr. Wheelhouse. I loved it.
Great job on this Podcast.
This was a very informative show.
I honestly wasn't aware of most of these 289's.
That's an incredible little motor that has an amazing history.
GREAT JOB!
the small block Ford Windsor has to be the most successful engine of the ages. And with the 351 W version, it has an all new focus in strokers... The little Windsor is still with us today since 1962... What an amazing success story
The 289s were stroked back in the day using 312 crankshafts. I think they were bumped up around 327 cid.
I for one loved that little 289 Well balanced Fast revving little power house. @ 69 Yrs old I think they were one of the best motors ever made bar none. She's real fine my 289
Nice video. I have a 289 in my Tiger- the early 5 bolt bellhousing block- so it went straight in. I popped a 302 crank in it and some GT-40X heads. Best engine I've ever done.
Happy memories of my first car, a 289 cu. In. V8 equipped 1968 Ford Fairlane with three on the tree!
Great engines! May I offer that with a nice exhaust system, the 289 also had a glorious note. Among the best sounding engines ever.
I once owned a little Griffith (TVR) 400 that had the 289 HiPo in an 1,200 lb fiberglass car. That thing scared me at times!
Yes, quite a different exhaust note compared to the 351
My father bought a 1963 Ford County Squire station wagon, brand new, with a Hi-Po 289, 3 on the tree manual transmission with a overdrive. Fast forward to 1976. I ended up with the wagon and it only had 68k miles. I pulled the 289 and dropped it into a 6 cyl 66 Mustang I had picked up. That 289 was AWESOME compared to a huge amount of 302 Mustangs that I bought shortly after that first 66. It was like comparing apples to oranges. I miss that ol 66!!!
The 1964 Falcon Sprint is one of my all-time favorite Ford cars. Only the Sprint has the shortened roof line which looks great
I've been a Ford guy and Mustang owner for almost 40 years, and in all of the shows I've ever been to, there have been a handful of cars that I've seen with a 260, in the flesh. Never have I seen an actual 221 under the hood.
Look for the 1962 Fairlane with the small chrome V8 badge on the front fender...the 221 had a really short production life...
Here in NZ FOMOCO assembled Fairlaines in the 1960's all ex Wndsor Plant in Canada and only 4 doors. If it wasn't for Canada being a Commonwealth country like us we would have got no US based Fords because of tarriffs. The 62 through to 64 Fairlanes were real popular and commonly known here as a Ford "Compact" and were the right size for our roads. The 62 came with the 221engine while the 63 & 64 mainly got the 260.@@romemancer7905
I wrecked my first car an my cousin sold me ( for a dollar).
It was a 1963 galaxie sedan with the 221.
In the vancouver area ive seen a handful of the 221 and a fair number of the 260’s at car shows. In the ‘60’s there were quite a few local ford dealerships which may account for that.
I had a 64 1/2 mustang coupe that had the 260 in it. It didnt run when i bought the car and sold it shortly after.
Thanks, great video. I love hearing these great stories about the golden age of muscle cars.
Definitely. Had a 65 mustang. 289 twin electric fell pumps, 850 holly, 5000 foot pound clutch, 411 rear end, Trac bars, 3 quarter race cam offenhouser blueprints. Fiberglass in the right places. In short, nothing ever touched me, no big block could outrun it in the quarter. And those engines. Don't blow up, they run great. I'm old now, I'll never forget that sweet car. Looks like the future of the young, will be riding skate boards. Sad.
Love this - learned a ton in just 15 minutes. Well done! 🏁
Back in high school I had a 63 falcon Sprint convertible automatic I swapped the 260 out put a 289 in it with a little hotter cam intake carburetor headers and I beat the snot out of that car all through high School. It never let me down. Great little car now that I'm older I wish I still kept it the one car that I wish I still kept and I didn't but I had mechanical issues not with the drivetrain but with the car basically falling apart around the engine transmission and rear end LOL LOL. When you get to the point that you're 19 years old and you don't have the resources to keep buying new parts or replacing them or having them fixed I finally had a call today. Sad to say but that day came in 1979 or 1980. Thank you keep up the great work on these older Fords love it
I rebuilt 2 289s and loved them.
One was in my 65 mustang and the other was in a 66 Bronco.
Fun V8 to play with
I always wondered why so many guys with early Mustangs have a problem with them overheating?
@@Deucealive75
My uncle, who was a Ford mechanic, warned me early on about them overheating in warmer climates. Used a 3 core radiator and a 180 degree thermostat. Never had issues
Been a mechanic for 37 years and this little donk is still my fav,302 windsor close,08 holdem amnd the Barra
308 holden sorry
My first car was a 1965 Mustang with a 289 V8. Since then and up until 2 years ago I had a 1969 Mustang Fastback with a 351W in it and a Shelby style suspension. It was sweet in the canyons! Those motors were bulletproof. I also had during some of that time an '88 GT 5ltr with a manual transmission. Made me anxious in LA traffic. It was a rocket.
I built my GT40 replica with a strong 351 C4v and was quite happy until i decided to build a peppy 289 for it. The differenc was nothing short of phenominal.. The weight alone conpletely transformed the handling of the car. I could carry possibly 20mph more into the bends and its willingness to rev really suits the lightweight car.. Its limited to 7500rpm and will drive like that all day and all night. It pulls like a train in all gears, will touch 200 mph if the track is long enough and sounds simply amazing.. So glad i decided to swap. Took me a few years to find a good 289 block being in the UK, but was worth the effort...
My most favorite auto engine ever built!
Well documented and superbly told story and reporting.
Regretfully spoiled by politics.
Great little engine, have one in my 65 comet. People that don't know much about it seem a bit disappointed when I say 289 and not something bigger but I just smile.
Thanks for the history on the 289w.
A few milestones from Australia you can add.
Ford XR GT won Bathurst.
Geoghegan's 1965 Mustang 289w is the most successful race car in Australia, it won 68 races from 74 race starts.
He also followed up using the 289w at first but changed to a 302w in his 1967 Mustang GTA, not sure of races and wins for the 289w, I'm certain this car is the 3rd most successful race car in Australia with 89 wins from 144 starts, behind Allan Moffat's 69 Mustang Trans Am 302Boss 101 wins from 151 starts.
My stepdad showed up with a 65 Hypo 289 in 1969. He worked fir Fairchild in Santa Clara. It had posi, 4 soeed, pony interior, tge front end was akreadu hammered in just 4 short years. Think he drove it hard in to the turns.
We moved to Portland Me. a few tears later, he put a telephone pole mud way into the engine compartment coming home from drinking rolling along on Portland Me. winter ice.
Loved it, my mom was scared of it, had tried to out ut in the garage in Maine, dug two wheel holes in our asphalt driveway cuz it had studded tires. Studded tires will do some work on old asphalt with a 289 271 hp.
Man oh man those clips of Riverside bring back some memories. I remember seeing a poster of a guy with the hood up on his Corvette and a Cobra in the background with lots of smoke coming out of the engine and the caption was "happiness is a Corvette owner seeing the only Cobra blow his engine in Saturday practice."
I remember an old joke saying the easiest way to get a Corvette on a trailer was to start a Cobra.
I had a 1964 Galaxie and Ford custom( really a 2 door post Galaxie) with standard 289s. It was suprising how well those cars moved those big cars, especially on the freeway.
I am getting a Merc Cyclone together soon and have already built a 289 that should work out to be about 330hp. Plenty enough to go out and have serious fun and reliability, but still have enough uumpf to get the job done if you put the spurs to it. Really looking forward to it. Thanks for a well done and informative video.
The 289 is my favorite engine. I had one in my '64 Mercury Comet Caliente. The 4bbl version with 220 HP. I loved it, and it never failed me.
My Dad bought a 1966 Fairlane 500 with a C-Code 289 coupled to a manual three-on-the-tree transmission. I spent a lot of time in the backseat of that Fairlane traveling across the country. The 289 was bulletproof. I think it had @ 130,000 miles by the time it was sold in the early 1980s. I still run across the occasional '66 Fairlane with the 289. Amazing that such an awesome engine had such a short run.
Nice to hear. My dad bought a new ‘66 fairlane wagon with 289 2v and 3 on the tree. I was with him when he bought it and i still have it today. Just wish I had more time to drive it.
Had one of those too, 289 3 on the tree, loved that little Fairlane!!!!
I was raised in Southern Michigan, I witnessed several cars from different manufacturers with different motors, 289 Fords, 283 Chevy, 327 Chevy, 318 Mopar. Serious fun. I ended up with a 302 camero with all the bells and whistles. Not saying what was best, just what I saw, all were impressive.
An interesting story about the Sunbeam Tiger was that it started out as the Alpine with a 1.7 litre 4. It featured in the start of some of the episodes of Get Smart. Sunbeam was an old British company that was bought by the Rootes Group, a British version of America's big 3 in that they bought up several other car manufacturers in the UK. Amongst the other companies were Hillman, Humber & Commer trucks & vans. Carroll Shelby fitted (shoe horned) a Ford 260 into the engine bay of the Alpine to great success & followed it with the 289. A few years later, Chrysler bought the Rootes Group & discontinued the Tiger because of competitor Ford's engine, but didn't resurrect the Tiger with one of their own V8s, maybe because the smallest one wouldn't fit in the small engine bay of the Alpine without major chassis surgery & were probably too heavy anyway, compared to the 260 & 289. Even the Tiger needed a new transmission tunnel because of the bigger gearbox. Pity.
@elrofudbucker6806 - You're exactly right. The Chrysler 273 engine wouldn't fit without extensive mods so they dropped the Tiger. A high school friend of mine told me his Dad bought a Tiger II (289) and put a mild cam, bigger Holley and some headers on it. He could yank the front wheels a couple inches off the ground with a strong start! What a sleeper! 🤠
Just spent some time (and $) finally giving my "wife's" '65 289 the attention and love it deserves. Should be picking her up today if all goes well. New Edelbrock 4 barrel, hedman headers with two and a half inch pipes out through Flowmaster 40's, some paint and a bunch of other little goodies. I am so friggin' excited to pick her up 😎
My 1968 289 mustang convertibles was a great car.even did route 66 back in the day
My parents bought me a 68 mustang
Ragtop 289 V8 jade metallic green
Late 1978 for $500 fun car
They also raced in England (Mann racing) and many were entered in the Tour de France automobile rally’s, among others! Great video!!!
The problem the 289 had, besides only being a two bolt main (i have heard that the LeMans engined 289 GT40's came apart so much in testing that they tried block girdles but those didn't help much, and finally Ford made some specialized 4 bolt main castings for some of the factory sponsored 289's GT40's but have never been able to confirm if that was true or not) was the heads didn't breath very good...even the fabled HIPO heads had the same valve sizes as the C code/2 barrel heads. the head porting gurus at the speed shop in Burbank that were right beside Carol's original shop did wonders with porting and resizing the valves which resulted in the Shelby competition 289's dynoing in the mid/high 300 HP range with some over 400 HP. The final trick was running the chevy 1.92 intake valves (the 2.02's would not fit) with significant porting.
You are correct, and in a way, in my opinion, that's adds to the great story. The heads never did flow that much, and yet they still achieved so much! As I mentioned it was designed originally for economy. Pretty darn cool I think.
@@Wheelhouse812 I agree it certainly was the little engine that could...i owned a '65 Hipo K code fastback mustang and I had a buddy in HS who had a i believe '63 comet with a 260 hipo that was a running car. I just never understood why Ford didn't match the Chevy SB in performance attributes: 4 bolt main engines and much better flowing heads, really until the Boss 302/Cleveland 351 engines.
The 390 had the same problem. The chevy 396 was a much better breather which gave it a good edge.
@@colinnicols5387 The original 390 high performance in I believe '63 was pretty much a baby 427 and was a strong engine...the 390 of the late 60's was another story...I beat a buddy with a '68 Mustang Gt with a 390 4 barrel dual exhaust with my '67 LeMans with the 328 High Output engine
@@Wheelhouse812 I owned a '65 Hipo Mustang (K code) so the 289 holds a special place in my heart, but really what did it achieve? Growing up, the chevy SB's were always much faster in my neck of the woods.
@10:10 I'm sure it's high-temp paint, but would you take the exhaust manifold mating surfaces on the heads down to bare iron, or just bolt-up the gaskets as is?
Great to hear the history of the 289. Never had one but I was always in love with the 1966 Mustang 2+2 HiPo with the beautiful Trumpet Tip Louvered Exhaust Pipes. Thanks for your hard work and sharing your knowledge ! ! Absolutely Excellent presentation !
I read in a Special Edition magazine once that Carroll Shelby initially did not want to do the Mustang upgrade for Ford. Which eventually became the Shelby Mustang and the rest is history ! As they say. If your familiar with that it would be a great topic for you to cover.
This is true. Shelby initially did not want to race the mustang, but later fell in love with them
@@Wheelhouse812 Thanks for the reply. I lost the magazine in one of the Florida hurricanes. If I still had it I would arrange for you to get a copy pf the article. Good day Sir !
Best engine have used them since the 60s currently very reliable hard to hurt have pissed off many Big blocks no matter what the brand love the video good info a lot of people do not realize thanks for sharing
Many years ago I had a compact Fairlane with a 289 and C4 trans, the engine had a Holley 600 4 barrel carby and headers tuned for low to mid range torque. This car would accelerate very quick off the mark and ran easily to 7000 rpm. Great little motor.
i owned a 1966 Mustang With a k code 289 and did a lot of Street racing back in the late 1960's, With the Cobra intake headers and a Holley carb. I walked on a bunch of big block Cars, including 390 mustang s and 389 GTO's. My car had 3.89 pos it jumped out of the hole hard. My best time at a 4000 foot altitude strip was 13.2 at 103 mph.
My Uncle Charley had a 66 Mustang GT with a HiPo289 4 speed. It was a blast to drive. I had a 64 Fairlane with a 289 2 barrel. I loved that car and to this day I regret selling it.
We all do. Back then, it was just another car. Mine was a '65 Mustang convertible, dark blue with a white top.
289 with the forged crankshaft was a beast. I had a 1966 Mustang GT 4 speed.
I wonder why you didn't mention the cast crankshaft vs the forged crankshaft
What caught my eye in the HS parking lot through the last 2 years before graduating was a 69 Mach 1 , the owner I had never met but till later , what was striking about the car was the rather raw sound it was producing . A lift and duration you could hear from a distance . It was a built 302 with all the tricks , 351 heads , crazy cam that would smoke the tires at will . I was successful in buying the car , later to a complete restore , made a few more improvements and cleaned the vehicle to my minds vision .
When I was a kid my dad had a 69 mach1 428 super cobrajet R-code with the 4 speed top loader and 4.30(I believe it was) rear gears. It was amazing. He kicks himself over selling it in the early 2000's for like 13k in great condition. Now that is one of the most rare ford built mustangs ever made and worth 100k+
@@huntermckinley593just doesn't bear thinking about does it. At least not too often that's for sure.
If we knew what we know, back then, we would have known.
67 Mustang 289, 4 speed 390 rated trans, 4 barrel 550 carb and headers I added, plus better tires. My first car, driven 22 hours non-stop to get back home when young. Miss that girl!
The Ford 289 and the Chevy 283 are both are underrated engines! Power vs Weight!
I believe the 283 is quite a bit heavier than the 289 .
100% ! Both are in top 10 ALL TIME BEST small blocks !!!!!!
And don't forget the 273 Chrysler
Great vid new subscriber, I worked at DST also known as Dearborn Steel Tubing from 1968 to 1972 and we were building the performance intake manifolds for Ford, I built a few of 289s back then because we had access to all of the parts in the the Total Performance Catolog, sure was great back then and it is a great engine!
This spring the 289 goes back in my 67 coupe. Can't wait to drive like the old days with standard brakes and steering.
I had a friend that had a 64 Comet that had a 289 Engine, he drag raced this car almost non stop, that engine would just not Give Up-probably one of the best Engines of it's era....
I picked up a few more tidbits here about Fords fantastic racing heritage.
I had a 289 in a 63 Galaxie wagon, a 64 Galaxie sedan, a 66 Mustang, and a 64 Fairlane 500 (High Pro). Loved that engine! My sisters neighbor had one in a sprint car!
This is very well done. A great overview highlighting all the good stuff!
I bleed Ford blue, a multiple Ford GT owner among others and a Ford Racing hobby historian.
Keep them coming. And yes, "Lets go Brandon".
I have been a Ford guy since the 70's, and never heard of a Windsor family of engines until the last 20 years or so. Back then only engine classed as a Windsor was the 351.
I’m running a 10:1 331 in my Bronco. I consider it Fords 327 at 30 over. I get 15 mpg with a lead foot and that’s through a 9” rear with 3.73 gears on 35” mud terrains. Not a race car but it’s a manual and does 85 mph on freeway at 3100 rpm.
Great hist❤ory lesson, learned something new. I am a new follower. The first car I had was a 67 with a 289. Sold it when I went in the military. Wish I had been able to keep it.
...289 also not a gas hog.
Those small blocks had reasonable economy. I had a 1965 Impala with a 283 engine, 3 on the tree and overdrive. It got 25mpg on the highway and 22 average.
thank you for helping to fill in my knowledge of engines from Back n the day
One of my cars to lust for is a Superformance GT40 MKI with a 289 engine & 4 speed manual transmission and an air conditioner for the Texas heat . .
I put a 289 4v in a 71 f100 4x4 that had a 300 inline 6 originally. That little 289 has lived in that old pickup flawlessly for over 20 years now and has run the same as the day i put it in ever since. A bunch more power and much better fuel economy than the 300 inline 6 ever had. Ive driven that truck well over 50k in the 20 years and it had over 80k on it when i dropped it in the truck. Still does great and fires up immediately every time
you forgot to mention the gunney westlake 289. it had over head cams and 4 valves per cylinder. it put out around 400+HP.
Gurney development started on the 221 higher reving
5:09 Hey, the Super Mustang (middle left)! Which was recently found and fully restored by Don Lyons, the same guy that restored Mario Andretti’s rookie car in the IMAX ‘Super Speedway’. My house is in the background shot as the car was being started. Both cars built in the shop next door to my house. I watched them both come together piece by piece.
Fords inline 6 was a legendary motor also. Durability, power, ease of working on. Should have never abandoned that platform.
I had a '63 Econoline I used for construction work and camping in the mountains. 170 ci online six. Never had a bit of problem with that 6, but it was a dog in the mountains. Sold it about 19 years ago. Fun times in that thing.
I had one that took a beating but would not die. Several others Ford sixes that were problem free. Best motor from that era. I had also had Chevy sixes but all had head valves and wrapped heads and most had distributor problems.
Too true.
Wheelhouse, thank you very good video. Learned a lot from your video. The 289 was the engine of my youth, in the 70s. I got the old family 63 Galaxie 500 (it most of had one of the first ones in it) with one had great fun driving it to the beach and around town. My friend had a 260 in I think it was a Comet and it was great except when it took a hard left turn down hill. We learned a lot about auto repair and engine mods. Later when I went to College, my roommate raced Falcons with built 289s and had one he drove, they were wicked fast.
I have a 292 in a Ford 1964 f250 and it's a great engine 😊
Always loved my 289 in my 67 cougar, great engine that never let me down.
HS friend owned a black ‘66 Bronco with a 289 Hypo in it.327 Chevelles couldn’t touch it.I made a lot of side(gas) money for my GTO,on dozens of street races.
I had a 225 hp 289 in my 66 mustang GT. Fresh out of high school (1976) we hooked up a towbar to my friends VW bug & headed to LA Cali.
On the way back home (Albuquerque, N.M) we heard the mustang started knocking in Needles California. with no oil pressure we started running 90w gear oil & that little 289 mustang still got us home. 💕👍 (towing a VW)
I used 289 heads on a 260 to great effect. 7000 redline and 300 hp. I had a few other tricks like a windage tray, Rhodes lifters and some head porting. Flow is the key to making power. Best results were with a single plane 4bbl using a 450CFM Holley. The 260 originally had small intake valves and ports but it pulled solid to 6700 RPM with 289 heads and the larger intake path.. I used a Crane dual pattern cam , don't recall the specs. I had one fast Falcon.
I owned a 289 briefly...
Blew it up by running it out of oil.
Lost the motor, and the F-600 it came in.
Broke my heart.
Won't go into the whole length of the story, but it haunts me to this day.
I think the most underappreciated Ford factory engine would be the '58 410/400 Mercury Super Marauder (First 400 bhp domestic V8).
Most underappreciated Shelby factory engine would be the 1962 260/260.
Most under-rated engine was likely the 1970 351C 4V which actually made 20% over factory rated power according to engine dyno test.
The Cleveland is getting forgotten about slowly my favorite engine. 4v Cleveland
Great video. Very informative. I'm gathering up some sbf parts and peaces for a nice 302 build. I'll keep watching
First the 260 then the 289 found a home in the Sunbeam Tiger ❤.
My first car was a 63 Fairlane with a 221. Great car. Thanks for this video.
Love the 289, and love the T-shirt!!