When muscle car enthusiasts talk about the mightiest engines produced by Ford during the 1960s and 1970s, the Boss 351 rarely gets mentioned. However, this underappreciated eight-cylinder gem, which ...
The Ford 351 Windsor is one of the most popular V8 engines Ford Motor Company has ever built. It belongs to the small block Ford family and was first introduced in 1969 with the Ford Mustang Mach 1.
For the most part, the Gen-I and II Chevy small-block has been the same basic engine since 1955 (except you, 400, you made things weird), but Ford V8s do not play by the same rules. Asking for a "Ford ...
The writing was on the wall a couple of years ago: Ford's tooling for the N351 cylinder head casting was wearing out, and if something wasn't done, that casting stood a chance of going the way of the ...
Ford Racing has released a new performance engine block based on the architecture of the automaker's famed Windsor 351. The Boss 351 block is suitable for use in race cars and street rods. It carries ...
The big-block is dead. We've heard from factory sources that the venerable Ford 385-series (429/460/514) crate engines are going to be discontinued, though blocks and heads will continue to be ...
Horse Sense:As popular as the 351W-in-a-Mustang swap is, Ford waited until the last year of the Mustang's pushrod engine to offer a production Mustang with a 351. Only 250 units of the '95 Mustang ...
Ralph Hanson June 15, 2009 Comment Now! Ford’s Windsor 351 small-block V8 is far from dead despite its origins dating back to the early 1960s. Ford’s motorsports division, Ford Racing, has just ...
What does it take to build a monster--a wicked winder that is only fit for the track or some insanely wild street car with no bones about using as much fuel as a battleship and pouring out more ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. For the most part, the Gen-I and II Chevy small-block has been the same basic engine since 1955 (except you, 400, you made things ...