KMorison wrote:
I was thinking along the lines of 'every bit helps.'
Honestly, I'm not sure where to go next with the car, but I do want to make some more power out of it without getting into a significant build.
Depending on the year of 242 GT that you've got you'll have either 104 or 107 hp. The exhaust flows well enough to make well over that so it's not a huge restriction, the airbox moves more air than the engine can ingest so that's not the issue...the exhaust valve is a for sure restriction and the cam selections are somewhat limited.
As I see it, you're stuck where we all have been before...wanting the car to at least be peppy. I always think that for the time, when V8's were making just a little more power than this little 4 banger, it was pretty good. A lot of Volvo people think that the NA cars were just fine - and I'm not arguing against that, but they were not performance cars (even with the GT badge) and the market for performance NA Volvo stuff (and I'm going to stretch this just a little) is dominated by the older pushrod engines. We have cams, mods, valves and other goodies that are basically drop in and we can hit 160 HP on a pretty reasonable budget (not no budget, like $4 - 6K). That gets you a very nicely rebuilt engine with nice usable torque band and OK performance.
So where does that leave you? Well...there is hope. The B21F came with either 8.5 or 9.3 to 1 compression ratios. If the engine's in good shape (and they often have more miles on them than you'd like and the bores are pretty shiny etc...they don't run forever), then a stock rebuild ($1500) would get you in the game of what is called a "+T" which means you've added a turbo.
In stock trim (5-7 psi), that gets you 140 - 150 hp. You've got to handle the fuel and spark management somehow (stock NA K-Jet isn't going to cut it) - an EFI swap using MegaSquirt or LH 2.2 (Bosch Jetronic) will have you smiling and be a very nice wake up. This is stock stuff - stock turbo, stock manifold, stock drive train.
Let's call that the first stage of the fun. Some guys find it easier to just source a reasonable 700 series turbo car (literally free sometimes) and swap the engine over - this costs mostly time. Unobtanium parts include things like the fan shroud - get creative or find a 240 one. Maybe a set of rings and a bottle brush hone if you're sort of serious. We can help you with that swap as just about everyone commenting in this thread has done it (we don't have any BS guys on this forum). There are conversion wiring harnesses available for this swap - it's that common (Google Dave Barton wiring harness LH 2.2 - Greg's got the prototype in his car).
Next up would be to find a late 700 or 900 series car and go up to Jetronic 2.4 (called LH 2.4) - this is what I'm running. You do need to start to assemble things, but the process is relatively painless. So you'd need a wiring harness from a later 240 (I'll list contacts later) and a few other things. Many of these cars were automatics and that isn't the end of the world, but it's not as much fun...so you'll need a drilled flywheel to run 2.4 (60-2 pattern) - these can be sourced or just made (I've got a build thread - it's covered in there). You'll need the auxiliary shaft from an LH 2.4 240 (they were all NA) and the dizzy as the 9XX cars run a head mounted dizzy that won't fit in a 240 without surgery and have a wiring harness that is a nightmare to convert. LH 2.4 needs a signal to indicate if the car is rolling or not and it doesn't care much about what that signal might be so lots of solutions have been tried and most work. Then there is about 9 wires to connect and you're golden.
2.2 is considered the easier swap as it doesn't require the drilled flywheel and movement signal, the dizzy was in the same place on cars running 2.2 so you just need that and the ignition box as well as the ECU. Other nice things to include are a turbo manifold from a 1990 and up car (referred to as the 90+ manifold), a larger turbo from an 850T (more work to fit) and a bigger exhaust (2.5" is fine). My set up makes around 250 hp at the crank at 2 bar, starts when it's -30° C and gives me a solid 10 L / 100 km on the highway. This version costs money and is a project. Wiring harnesses are available from a guy called Philski o'flood on Turbobricks...he's got the ignition and ECU's normally as well.
You could also Megasquirt it if you don't want to go with stock fuel and spark management. Matt and Dale are among the first guys to have done this to these engines...so the knowledge lives here. It's been done a lot and the problems are sorted out - but you've got to like tuning and understand what everything is doing as you're at the base level of management. So if you want a black box, then LH swap it. If you want to play, then MS (or some other stand alone).
Band-aid ripped off. Sorry.