Possible Firebird 3800 build
- 3800SERIESII
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1997 Pontiac Firebird
Possible Firebird 3800 build
Hello all,
I was just venturing an idea while in my Database Management class the other day, which the idea and the class really have no relation; I was merely just day dreaming. The stock L36 and the Y87 package do pretty well on projecting the power to the pavement but some more power would be nice, in the age where v6's are putting 300+ HP out of the factory. Also, an engine that will bolt in to the current stock setup would be nice and minimal to no fab work.
Additionally, this plan will probably go into place once I get my BS in Computer Science, next 1-2 years and the funds are possible.
Note: Goal would be ~400 RWHP & ~450 RWTQ
The idea build includes but is not limited to:
-Current L36, or a L67 (although lower compression) or a L26 (Due to stronger internals), and just swap the Firebird intake onto the motor so there is not any clearance issues
-Turbo, intercooler, and wastegate (no specifics yet)
-Guages
-Fuel pump, injectors, and lines (return-less most likely)
-Tune (of course)
-As for the transmission, build the current 4L60-e or find some way to use a 200-4R (and maybe find a bellhousing to work)
-Also, the rearend already had 3.42 gears and an Auburn LSD
Any thoughts? Sounded pretty good to me.
I was just venturing an idea while in my Database Management class the other day, which the idea and the class really have no relation; I was merely just day dreaming. The stock L36 and the Y87 package do pretty well on projecting the power to the pavement but some more power would be nice, in the age where v6's are putting 300+ HP out of the factory. Also, an engine that will bolt in to the current stock setup would be nice and minimal to no fab work.
Additionally, this plan will probably go into place once I get my BS in Computer Science, next 1-2 years and the funds are possible.
Note: Goal would be ~400 RWHP & ~450 RWTQ
The idea build includes but is not limited to:
-Current L36, or a L67 (although lower compression) or a L26 (Due to stronger internals), and just swap the Firebird intake onto the motor so there is not any clearance issues
-Turbo, intercooler, and wastegate (no specifics yet)
-Guages
-Fuel pump, injectors, and lines (return-less most likely)
-Tune (of course)
-As for the transmission, build the current 4L60-e or find some way to use a 200-4R (and maybe find a bellhousing to work)
-Also, the rearend already had 3.42 gears and an Auburn LSD
Any thoughts? Sounded pretty good to me.
1999 Pontiac Bonneville SE- Stored -All stock, Sony CDX-GT570UP HU w/ Scosche HD 6.5"'s front/Alpine S 6x9 rear, 153,000 miles
1996 Pontiac Bonneville SE- Now a parts car - HAI, Muffler Delete, Summit Y-pipe, 250,000 miles

1997 Pontiac Firebird - DD - 3800 Series II, Cold air intake/FWI, Y87 Package, Sony DSX-S100 Digital Media Reciever, 180,000 miles
1996 Pontiac Bonneville SE- Now a parts car - HAI, Muffler Delete, Summit Y-pipe, 250,000 miles

1997 Pontiac Firebird - DD - 3800 Series II, Cold air intake/FWI, Y87 Package, Sony DSX-S100 Digital Media Reciever, 180,000 miles
- nos4blood70
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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
L26s are actually the weakest 3800. Turbo guys pop them all the time. Your L36 will handle boost perfectly fine if you tune it right.
Take a look at this... Expensive, but it might give you some research ideas:
http://cartuning.ca/products/product.ph ... engine=l36
400whp with a turbo on a 3800 is cake. Only issue would be getting the trans to hold.
Take a look at this... Expensive, but it might give you some research ideas:
http://cartuning.ca/products/product.ph ... engine=l36
400whp with a turbo on a 3800 is cake. Only issue would be getting the trans to hold.
- Jfridge92
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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
Also, the rear end may need some attention at that power. I'm not sure how the V6 rear ends are, but LSx guys pop the standard 10 bolt rears at stock power all the time with a sticky tire.

Joseph
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- Wes
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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
Those gen F bodies came with a 5 speed manual trans that fits the BoP bell housing, since you mentioned little fab work. Not sure of their durability though myself. Perhaps others can chime in on that.
Or what about a bell housing adapter to use the 6 speed T56 the LS motors came with?
Or are you set on keeping it automatic?
Or what about a bell housing adapter to use the 6 speed T56 the LS motors came with?
Or are you set on keeping it automatic?

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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
There are adapter plates that go between BOP and Chevy and the corporate metric patterns too if you need options.
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The Fleet:
'93 SSEi - Twincharged + manual Build thread
'97 Camaro - Top swap
'05 STS - V8, AWD, her DD
'92 Trofeo - Fair weather DD
'99 Montana - top swap 3800
'04 Sierra 2500HD - LLY Duramax
Current project:
Something cool, trust me.
Upcoming projects:
'92 Bonneville SSE
'87 LeSabre T-type
'67 LeSabre
Gone to greener pastures:
'84 Sierra Classic - Twin turbo 3800
'97 LeSabre - Top swap
RIP:
'86 LeSabre - pictures
'93 SE - L67
- nos4blood70
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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
T5s are very weak transmissions. Or so I heard.
I would try and go for a T56, but you would need to address the rear end.
I would try and go for a T56, but you would need to address the rear end.
- spoiledred94
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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
Really? You guys do have some kind of head for this....400whp with a turbo on a 3800 is cake. Only issue would be getting the trans to hold.
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great car. Wrecked


Burnt Bonny.
Note if you pull the injectors to obserbe fuel delivery...make sure you leave the plugs in and disconnect the ign. Believe me
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Zeik75
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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
Yeah t5's will blow apart in dramatic fashion with power. T56 would probably work depending on how crazy you go.

-Austin-
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- nos4blood70
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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
T56s are pretty stout. They hold the LSx guys into the 10s with little to no modifications.
- 3800SERIESII
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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
Looking to keep it auto. Build the 4l60e, go 4l80, or find some way to make a 200-4r work out of a GN. Prefer auto over manual, although about 15% of whp is lost vs manual but they are more consistent.
1999 Pontiac Bonneville SE- Stored -All stock, Sony CDX-GT570UP HU w/ Scosche HD 6.5"'s front/Alpine S 6x9 rear, 153,000 miles
1996 Pontiac Bonneville SE- Now a parts car - HAI, Muffler Delete, Summit Y-pipe, 250,000 miles

1997 Pontiac Firebird - DD - 3800 Series II, Cold air intake/FWI, Y87 Package, Sony DSX-S100 Digital Media Reciever, 180,000 miles
1996 Pontiac Bonneville SE- Now a parts car - HAI, Muffler Delete, Summit Y-pipe, 250,000 miles

1997 Pontiac Firebird - DD - 3800 Series II, Cold air intake/FWI, Y87 Package, Sony DSX-S100 Digital Media Reciever, 180,000 miles
- nos4blood70
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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
But much less fun! Especially an old 4 speed.
- bs009
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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
Hey! a fellow CS Major!
You're probably better off sticking with the 4l60e. It's not terribly hard to build up, and then afterward you can still tune the transmission.
x2 on the rear end. The 7.5" is a very weak rear end. The question isn't if it will blow up, but when.
As far as manual's go, the T56 is your best bet. I'm about to find out for myself this summer though if the world class T5 can handle a turbo L36.
Do it, but I'd wait until after you're done with college. You don't need more distractions right now, ask me how I know.
You're probably better off sticking with the 4l60e. It's not terribly hard to build up, and then afterward you can still tune the transmission.
x2 on the rear end. The 7.5" is a very weak rear end. The question isn't if it will blow up, but when.
As far as manual's go, the T56 is your best bet. I'm about to find out for myself this summer though if the world class T5 can handle a turbo L36.
Do it, but I'd wait until after you're done with college. You don't need more distractions right now, ask me how I know.

2009 Chevy Silverado 2500HD crew cab, 6.0, Z71. The project mover.
2002 Regal GS: 3.4 pulley, E85, and quicker than my old 99
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- 3800SERIESII
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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
Yeah, that is what I am intending to do, build be 4L60E as there is a lot of aftermarket for them and are fairly common to build up.bs009 wrote:Hey! a fellow CS Major!
You're probably better off sticking with the 4l60e. It's not terribly hard to build up, and then afterward you can still tune the transmission.
x2 on the rear end. The 7.5" is a very weak rear end. The question isn't if it will blow up, but when.
As far as manual's go, the T56 is your best bet. I'm about to find out for myself this summer though if the world class T5 can handle a turbo L36.
Do it, but I'd wait until after you're done with college. You don't need more distractions right now, ask me how I know.
As far as a rear end, what about a GN rear end?
How far into the degree are you? I am in my junior year and still have a bit of schooling to go but it will pay off, at least that is what I tell myself to prevent burn-out that happens oh-so-often during college. It is actually finals week here and let me tell ya, I am ready to be done for the summer and working full time, most stressful semester of my academic year.
1999 Pontiac Bonneville SE- Stored -All stock, Sony CDX-GT570UP HU w/ Scosche HD 6.5"'s front/Alpine S 6x9 rear, 153,000 miles
1996 Pontiac Bonneville SE- Now a parts car - HAI, Muffler Delete, Summit Y-pipe, 250,000 miles

1997 Pontiac Firebird - DD - 3800 Series II, Cold air intake/FWI, Y87 Package, Sony DSX-S100 Digital Media Reciever, 180,000 miles
1996 Pontiac Bonneville SE- Now a parts car - HAI, Muffler Delete, Summit Y-pipe, 250,000 miles

1997 Pontiac Firebird - DD - 3800 Series II, Cold air intake/FWI, Y87 Package, Sony DSX-S100 Digital Media Reciever, 180,000 miles
- bs009
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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
I'm currently a senior and am hoping to graduate after the fall semester. It's definitely a tough program; I'm confident it will pay off though! Just gotta stay focused and keep your eyes on the prize.
I'm not well versed in F-body's, but I don't think the GN rear end will bolt up. They use a ladder bar instead of the bar the f-body's use that bolts to the transmission. I'm sure it'd be the wrong width too.
Most G-body guys go for the Ford 9", but that's about a $1000 investment at the end of the day. It's the last rear you'll ever have to buy though.
The next step up from the 7.5" though is the 8.5"; I believe that's what LS1 cars came with. It'd be bolt in and relatively inexpensive. This is only a 10 bolt though and it's not amazing. You might be able to get away with it for a while.
Then there's also 12 bolt 8.5" rears out there. These are very strong and should take whatever you throw at it.
Basically, the sky's the limit, just depends on how much you want to spend. I'm sure there's a ton of aftermarket for the F-body's out there. Just note that 3rd gen rears won't bolt up since they don't have that transmission bar. IIRC they use a 4 link system.
Be ready to drop a lot of money on that rear end, especially if you piece everything together. Gears, carriers, axles, seals, bearings, brakes, the housing. It adds up fast.
I'm not well versed in F-body's, but I don't think the GN rear end will bolt up. They use a ladder bar instead of the bar the f-body's use that bolts to the transmission. I'm sure it'd be the wrong width too.
Most G-body guys go for the Ford 9", but that's about a $1000 investment at the end of the day. It's the last rear you'll ever have to buy though.
The next step up from the 7.5" though is the 8.5"; I believe that's what LS1 cars came with. It'd be bolt in and relatively inexpensive. This is only a 10 bolt though and it's not amazing. You might be able to get away with it for a while.
Then there's also 12 bolt 8.5" rears out there. These are very strong and should take whatever you throw at it.
Basically, the sky's the limit, just depends on how much you want to spend. I'm sure there's a ton of aftermarket for the F-body's out there. Just note that 3rd gen rears won't bolt up since they don't have that transmission bar. IIRC they use a 4 link system.
Be ready to drop a lot of money on that rear end, especially if you piece everything together. Gears, carriers, axles, seals, bearings, brakes, the housing. It adds up fast.

2009 Chevy Silverado 2500HD crew cab, 6.0, Z71. The project mover.
2002 Regal GS: 3.4 pulley, E85, and quicker than my old 99
1982 Pontiac Grand Prix L67, T56, GT45, T56, Holley EFI; It's pretty quick Mod list here
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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
Comparing to modern V6 has nothing to do with a 3800, DOHC, direct injection, variable valves, etc....
Building an F body with a 3800 will be a continual life of wishing you built an LSx car... By the time you add and tune a decent turbo setup you'll be into LS1 price ranges, where you could have more power, more power headroom, more reswle value, and 100% OEM reliability.
Building an F body with a 3800 will be a continual life of wishing you built an LSx car... By the time you add and tune a decent turbo setup you'll be into LS1 price ranges, where you could have more power, more power headroom, more reswle value, and 100% OEM reliability.
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Re: Possible Firebird 3800 build
Amen.BonneMe wrote:Comparing to modern V6 has nothing to do with a 3800, DOHC, direct injection, variable valves, etc....
Building an F body with a 3800 will be a continual life of wishing you built an LSx car... By the time you add and tune a decent turbo setup you'll be into LS1 price ranges, where you could have more power, more power headroom, more reswle value, and 100% OEM reliability.
An LS1 is really the only reasonable solution here
-Aaron-

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1986 Monte Carlo SS- The Toy
2002 Nissan Maxima - The Daily Beater
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