Here is the run down:
99 or 00 WJ 4.0 block
04 TJ TUPY revised 0331 head
4.0 connecting rods
AMC 258/CJ7 4.2L crank
Keith Black forged pistions- IC945-060- .060 over with 10.80cc dish
COMP Cams 68-239-4 Cam and Lifter Kit
COMP Cams High Energy Timing Chain Set - 3219
Victor Reinz/Full Gasket Set - 95-3568VR
GotPropane.com conversion kit
And possibly a Clifford carburated 4.0L intake manifold if I can spare the funds
I decided to go with the 99+ Wj/00+ TJ block originally because I had intended on building this for a 00+ TJ, but plans changed. I decided to stick with it for several reasons, ease of installation was not one of them.
For starters, it was free. It had been swapped because the previous owner had failed to change the oil for quite some time, causing sludge build up, so bad that eventually it spun the #1 rod bearing due to lack of oil.
It had enough miles on it that the block is close to whats called a seasoned block. After several years/miles of being heated up and cooled off, an engine will shift and distort as molecules realign themselves through a slow heat treat process, causing parts to not quite line up as perfectly as the day everything was machined. Lots of engine builders prefer old, high mileage engine blocks over a brand new one, for this very reason, believing after you go through and bore it out, deck it, and line hone it, you are not going to have any more movement since they are starting with a block that has already been heat treated, and everything has settled.
The 99+ WJ and 00+TJ blocks are a little different than the earlier style, and has a lot thicker castings around the cam shaft to fix a problem with the cams shaking themselves apart at high RPMs(higher than most factory 4.0s will ever see, but none the less), and have thicker cylinder walls, able to support up to .080 over, safely. Both may not be needed, but better to have it and not need it, than need it and not have it.
I wanted the head because, despite how everyone says the older heads flow better, I like the late model exhaust headers better, and since I'm doing all the port work myself, I'm confident I can open the exhaust ports up enough to make them flow similar numbers to the older heads. That and the head only has 13,000 miles on it. Yes I know that goes against the logic of using a seasoned block, but this way I don't have to have a bunch of machine work done, and if it gives me any problems, I'll just upgrade to a Hesco aluminum head.
Why Propane?
Originally I wanted to build this motor to put in a 00+ TJ with the coil ignition, and run it on E85, but I decided to build a Comanche instead. Well the Comanche has the old RENIX FI system, and I'm not a fan of it, too many quirks, and I still don't like that it has an EGR valve. I could do a HO swap and update everything to OBD 1 or 2, but then I would have to cut and splice wiring(I hate wiring!), and I would still have to fight a computer tuning the engine.
With Propane, I pull out all of the computer controlled stuff and bring it all back to a carbureted style setup, using a propane injector in place of a carb. Clean, plain, simple, easy to work on, easy to tune, and for as little as this will be driven over long distances, it will work for me.
Now for the pics:
The donor block



#1 rod journal

Sluge build up in the timing cover

The oil filter



4.2L Crank

I was really trying to get a crank from a carburated YJ, since they have the short snout, but due to a mix up at the shop I bought it from, didn't have one to sell me, so they threw in the spacer for free.



Keith Black forged goodness




