I'm in Louisiana, no smog checks. There is only a simple visual check under
the hood, for what I have no idea. One year I asked the woman doing the
check what she was looking for and she had no clue. She said she simply
opened the hoods and then closed it. Sometimes living in the armpit of the
country has it's advantages.
  -----Original Message-----
  From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
  Sent: Sunday, September 05, 2010 11:52 AM
  To: [email protected]; [email protected]
  Subject: Re: 99 10AE engine into a 97 Miata


  Keep in mind that a '97 car will be registered as a '97 car, while the
engine would be a '95.
  The '97 specs are for OBDII not OBDI as with many '95 models, so emission
inspections may become a problem if the full '97 equipment (like the crank
angle sensor at the crank pulley) is not available and the plug under the
dash isn't working.   What does your state require for emission inspections?

  Jerry aka LGO

  In a message dated 9/5/2010 12:33:24 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
[email protected] writes:
    Thanks for the info.

    At this point, I'm just going to get the '95 engine. I simply want to
get
    the car onto the road for him with the minimal amount of fuss.

    Thanks again,
    Lloyd

    -----Original Message-----
    From: Ian McCloghrie [mailto:[email protected]]
    Sent: Sunday, September 05, 2010 12:20 AM
    To: Lloyd Broussard
    Cc: [email protected]
    Subject: Re: 99 10AE engine into a 97 Miata


    On Sep 4, 2010 "Lloyd Broussard" wrote:
    >  I know the '95 is plug and play, but what about the '99?  The car
will be
    > bone stock when he gets it.  If he wants to do anything to it, it'll
be
    > sometime down the road. Right now I'm just trying to get it running.

    I'm not an expert on this, but I'll take a stab at it:

    Swapping the ECU is a pain, you'll want to keep the 97 one.

    The 97 ECU doesn't control the VICS flaps in the intake manifold, so
    you'd either have to leave them fixed in one position or find some kind
    of RPM-based switch to control them.  You might have to do some wire
    splicing to get the various sensors hooked up -- not sure if all the
    connectors are the same or not.

    The 99 uses a returnless fuel system, and the fuel rails don't
    interchange, so you'd either need to find a way to put the 97 FPR onto
    the 99 rail (not sure if it fits in place of the 99's pulse damper or
    not), or go with an aftermarket rail.

    You'll want a 97 alternator, since the 99 one is controlled by the ECU
    and the 97 ECU doesn't do that.

    > Another data point is that I'll need to put a header onto it. Will a
99
    > header connect to the 97 cat? I was thinking a stock one from FM
salvage,
    or
    > maybe a cheap one off of fleabay,

    I don't think the 99 header will bolt up to the 97 exhaust (at least,
    all the aftermarket companies sell different exhausts for the two
    cars, and presumably they wouldn't if they didn't have to).  A 97
    header would probably work, although you might need to be creative
    with the EGR pipe.

    You might also want to check the smog laws in your state regarding
    swapping motors between cars.  Neither of these swaps would be legal in
    California (although I doubt anyone would ever notice), dunno the laws
    in other states.

    --Ian

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