What motor mounts should I use, 1978 Phoenix???

Asked by Adamr May 06, 2013 at 01:48 AM about the 1978 Pontiac Phoenix

Question type: Maintenance & Repair

I have a 78 Phoenix which was a v-6 car. V-6 died so I pulled it. I want to use a 1973
pontiac 350 from a firebird to replace it. I have the motor mounts including 2 long bolts
still attached to the 350 but Im concerned they may not work because the part of the
mount which is attached to the frame looks as if it is much narrower than what would be
used to  attatch to the 350 pontiac mount. help?.  Someone said use a Ventura mount?

4 Answers

31,245

Your 78's frame should be the same as my old '79 305/7 parts car. I actually pulled the v-8 mounts off of it to put my 350 4-bolt chev engine in my '80 LeSabre which had a 3.8 v-6. I do know that the BOP's used a variety of different engine mounts. I'm thinkin you need to hit the wreckers. Speaking from experience do everything you can to change the mounts on the engine because I still remember 12 years ago trying to do the bolts up on the frame engine mounts behind the a-arm's. (lived a ways away from any wreckers had to make do with the parts that I had) Here is a list of GM x bodies to search. I think all had v-8 options. Buick Apollo (1973–1974; 1975 sedan only) Buick Skylark (1975 coupe only; 1976–1979) Chevrolet Nova (1968–1979) Oldsmobile Omega (1973–1979) Pontiac Ventura (1971–1977) Pontiac Phoenix (1977–1979)

1 people found this helpful.

Thanks yeti, yeah with a little more research I found another who said use the x-body mounts for both the motor side and the frame side. So 35$ later which is cheap for all 4 parts, I'm eagerly awaiting those deliveries to show up so I can start in on this thing. Thanks for the x- body interchange list..super helpful, I'm going to write down that list. Thanks for any other feedback from others who wish to chime in. - Adam

31,245

If your doin the frame side mounts I recomend finding a small flexible grabber tool with a built in magnet. It will hold the nut up there better than just one or the other. Sucks when the hardware takes a bad bounce and you have to dig for it in the frame. 12 years and I remember the pain. Good luck.

1 people found this helpful.

Lol, I know it won't be easy. I'll probably put a dab of grease on the magnet part of the tool to add a little more holding power. Thanks for Sharing your experience yeti. It'll help.

Your Answer:

Phoenix

Looking for a Used Phoenix in your area?

CarGurus has thousands of nationwide listings and the tools to find you a great deal.

Postal Code:

CarGurus Experts

  • #1
    yetilikesbeer
    Reputation
    20
View All

Find great deals from top-rated dealers

Search

Content submitted by Users is not endorsed by CarGurus, does not express the opinions of CarGurus, and should not be considered reviewed, screened, or approved by CarGurus. Please refer to CarGurus Terms of Use. Content will be removed if CarGurus becomes aware that it violates our policies.