The 1978-1979 Ford Bronco replaced the compact 1966-1977 model with a full-size truck-based design, the first of the larger Broncos that enthusiasts call the "Big Bronco." Ford built it on the 1973-1979 F-series platform, the body style collectors call "Dentside," and stretched the wheelbase to 104 inches from the early truck's 92 inches. A removable fiberglass top covered the rear cargo and seating area, leaving a fixed cab structure forward. Every 1978-1979 Bronco was a V8 four-wheel drive, with a Dana 44 front axle and a Ford 9-inch rear axle. The standard transmission was the New Process NP435 4-speed manual, with the C6 3-speed automatic optional, and the transfer case depended on that choice: manual trucks used the gear-driven New Process NP205 part-time case, while automatic trucks commonly used the chain-driven New Process NP203 full-time case. That full-time NP203 made full-time four-wheel drive available on these trucks, a setup that can be left engaged on dry pavement, unlike the part-time NP205. Front disc brakes were standard. Trim ran from the base Custom up through the Ranger XLT, with the Free Wheeling appearance package available for buyers who wanted the striped, blacked-out look of the period. The generation lasted only two model years before Ford downsized the truck onto the 1980 "Bullnose" platform, which makes 1978 and 1979 the only full-size Dentside Broncos.
At a glance
- Years: 1978-1979 (second generation, first full-size Bronco)
- Platform: 1973-1979 Ford F-series "Dentside" (F-100/F-150 based)
- Body style: two-door wagon with a removable fiberglass roof over the rear
- Engines: 351 cubic-inch (5.8L) and 400 cubic-inch (6.6L) "335-series" (Modified) V8s, all V8
- Drivetrain: four-wheel drive, NP435 4-speed manual standard with C6 3-speed automatic optional; transfer case by transmission (gear-driven NP205 part-time behind the manual, chain-driven NP203 full-time commonly behind the automatic, so full-time 4WD was available)
- Front axle: Dana 44 solid front axle
- Rear axle: Ford 9-inch
- Brakes: front disc brakes standard, rear drums
- Wheelbase: 104 inches
- Trims: Custom, Ranger XLT, plus the Free Wheeling appearance package
Year-by-year changes
| Year | Engines | Drivetrain & brakes | Notable changes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1978 | 351 cubic-inch (5.8L) and 400 cubic-inch (6.6L) V8s from the 335-series (Modified) family | Four-wheel drive, NP435 4-speed manual standard with C6 automatic optional, transfer case by transmission (gear-driven NP205 part-time with the manual, chain-driven NP203 full-time commonly with the automatic), Dana 44 front axle, Ford 9-inch rear axle, front disc brakes standard | First full-size Bronco; new 104-inch wheelbase on the Dentside F-series platform; removable fiberglass rear roof; Custom and Ranger XLT trims with the Free Wheeling package offered |
| 1979 | 351 cubic-inch (5.8L) and 400 cubic-inch (6.6L) V8s; emissions hardware revised | Four-wheel drive, NP435 4-speed manual standard with C6 automatic optional, transfer case by transmission (gear-driven NP205 part-time with the manual, chain-driven NP203 full-time commonly with the automatic), Dana 44 front axle, Ford 9-inch rear axle, front disc brakes standard; catalytic converter added | Last year of the full-size Dentside Bronco before the 1980 downsizing; round headlamps revised toward rectangular sealed-beam units on many trucks; emissions-driven calibration changes |
Why 1978 was a clean-sheet redesign
The 1978 Bronco shares almost nothing with the 1966-1977 truck that preceded it. Ford abandoned the compact 92-inch-wheelbase chassis and instead adapted the existing F-100/F-150 pickup platform, the 1973-1979 body that enthusiasts label "Dentside" for the long horizontal indent stamped down its sides. The 1978 Bronco rode on a 104-inch wheelbase, far longer than the early truck, and gained the wider track, larger cab, and heavier frame of a full-size pickup. This is the reason the second-generation truck is called the "Big Bronco": it was physically a different class of vehicle, sized to compete with the Chevrolet K5 Blazer and the Dodge Ramcharger rather than the Jeep CJ.
Engines and drivetrain
Both 1978 and 1979 full-size Broncos were V8-only, drawing on Ford's 335-series "Modified" engine family. The 400 cubic-inch (6.6L) V8 was offered, along with the 351 cubic-inch (5.8L). These are tall-deck "M" engines rather than the 351 Windsor or 351 Cleveland, and the 351M and 400 share architecture within that 335-series family. Power reached the ground through four-wheel drive, and the transfer case depended on which transmission a truck carried. The standard transmission was the New Process NP435 4-speed manual, paired with the gear-driven New Process NP205 part-time transfer case; the optional C6 3-speed automatic commonly paired with the chain-driven New Process NP203 full-time transfer case. With the part-time NP205, the front axle is engaged only when the case is shifted into four-wheel drive, so those trucks should not be driven in 4WD on dry pavement. The NP203 carries an inter-axle differential, which makes it a full-time four-wheel-drive case that can be left engaged on pavement, so the availability of full-time 4WD is a distinguishing feature of the automatic-equipped trucks in this generation. Specific advertised horsepower varied by year and emissions calibration, so confirm the figure for an individual truck against its build data rather than assuming a single number for the generation.
Axles, suspension, and brakes
The 1978-1979 Bronco used a solid Dana 44 front axle with the four-wheel-drive system and a Ford 9-inch rear axle, both heavier units than the early Bronco carried because the truck itself was heavier. Suspension was solid axles at both ends, in keeping with the F-series pickup underpinnings of the period. Front disc brakes were standard on these trucks, with drums at the rear, a normal full-size light-truck arrangement for the late 1970s. Because the second-generation Bronco is mechanically a full-size F-series, many service and chassis parts interchange with 1973-1979 F-100 and F-150 pickups, which helps when sourcing components today.
Body, roof, and trim levels
The full-size 1978-1979 Bronco was a two-door wagon with a fixed front cab and a removable fiberglass roof covering the rear seating and cargo area, so the back could be opened up while the windshield, doors, and front roofline stayed in place. Trim started with the base Custom and rose to the Ranger XLT, which added brightwork and a more finished interior. The Free Wheeling package was an appearance option of the era, recognizable by its multicolor tape stripes and blacked-out trim. Buyers could also order the truck for work or recreation duty, and many were equipped with the tow and off-road hardware expected of a full-size 4WD wagon.
What changed for 1979, and why it was the last year
The 1979 Bronco was the final full-size Dentside model. Tightening federal emissions rules brought a catalytic converter and revised engine calibrations for 1979, and front-end appearance shifted toward rectangular sealed-beam headlamps on many trucks as Ford freshened the look. For 1980 Ford replaced this platform with a downsized, lighter Bronco on the new "Bullnose" F-series body, which means 1978 and 1979 were the only Dentside-bodied (full-size) Broncos. That two-year window is why these trucks are comparatively scarce next to the long-running early Bronco and the later 1980-1986 generation.
What to know when buying a 1978-1979 Bronco
Rust is the first thing to check on any 1978-1979 full-size Bronco: inspect the rear quarters, the area under the removable fiberglass top, the tailgate, the cab corners, and the frame, since these trucks are now decades old and were used hard. Confirm which transfer case a truck carries (the part-time NP205 behind the manual or the full-time NP203 behind the automatic), that the four-wheel-drive system engages and disengages properly, and that the front Dana 44 axle and hubs are sound. The 400 and 351 V8s are durable but were never high-output by modern standards, so judge a truck on condition and originality rather than expecting strong power. Because so much hardware is shared with 1973-1979 F-series pickups, mechanical parts are findable, but Bronco-specific body pieces, especially the fiberglass top and rear glass, are harder to source and worth verifying before purchase.
Frequently asked questions
Is the 1978-1979 Bronco a "Bullnose"?
No. The 1978-1979 full-size Bronco is built on the 1973-1979 F-series "Dentside" body. The "Bullnose" nickname belongs to the following 1980-1986 F-series and the 1980-1986 third-generation Bronco. Calling a 1978 or 1979 Bronco a Bullnose is a common mix-up.
Why is the 1978-1979 Bronco called the "Big Bronco"?
The 1978-1979 Bronco was the first full-size Bronco. Ford moved it from the compact 92-inch-wheelbase early-Bronco chassis onto the full-size F-100/F-150 platform with a 104-inch wheelbase, making it much larger than the 1966-1977 truck. Enthusiasts use "Big Bronco" to distinguish these full-size trucks from the early compact Bronco.
What engines came in the 1978-1979 full-size Bronco?
The 1978-1979 Bronco was V8-only, using Ford's 335-series "Modified" engines: the 400 cubic-inch (6.6L) and the 351 cubic-inch (5.8L) V8. These are tall-deck "M" engines, not the 351 Windsor or Cleveland. Exact advertised horsepower varied by model year and emissions calibration.
Did the 1978-1979 Bronco have four-wheel drive and disc brakes?
Yes. Every 1978-1979 full-size Bronco came with four-wheel drive, a solid Dana 44 front axle, and a Ford 9-inch rear axle. The transfer case depended on the transmission: manual NP435 trucks used the gear-driven NP205 part-time case, while C6-automatic trucks commonly used the chain-driven NP203 full-time case, so full-time 4WD was available. The part-time NP205 should not be driven in 4WD on dry pavement, but the full-time NP203 can be left engaged on pavement. Front disc brakes were standard, with drums at the rear, the typical full-size light-truck setup of the period.
How many years was the second-generation Bronco built?
Only two model years, 1978 and 1979. Ford introduced the full-size Dentside Bronco for 1978 and replaced it for 1980 with a downsized "Bullnose" model, so the second generation is one of the shortest-lived Bronco generations.
Sources
- Ford factory shop manuals and parts catalogs for the 1973-1979 F-series and Bronco
- VIN and door-data-plate decoding for engine, axle, and trim verification
- Established full-size Bronco reference works and owner registries
- Period road tests and Ford sales literature of the 1978-1979 model years
Asked all the time
Is the 1978-1979 Bronco a "Bullnose"?
No. The 1978-1979 full-size Bronco is built on the 1973-1979 F-series "Dentside" body. The "Bullnose" nickname belongs to the following 1980-1986 F-series and the 1980-1986 third-generation Bronco. Calling a 1978 or 1979 Bronco a Bullnose is a common mix-up.
Why is the 1978-1979 Bronco called the "Big Bronco"?
The 1978-1979 Bronco was the first full-size Bronco. Ford moved it from the compact 92-inch-wheelbase early-Bronco chassis onto the full-size F-100/F-150 platform with a 104-inch wheelbase, making it much larger than the 1966-1977 truck. Enthusiasts use "Big Bronco" to distinguish these full-size trucks from the early compact Bronco.
What engines came in the 1978-1979 full-size Bronco?
The 1978-1979 Bronco was V8-only, using Ford's 335-series "Modified" engines: the 400 cubic-inch (6.6L) and the 351 cubic-inch (5.8L) V8. These are tall-deck "M" engines, not the 351 Windsor or Cleveland. Exact advertised horsepower varied by model year and emissions calibration.
Did the 1978-1979 Bronco have four-wheel drive and disc brakes?
Yes. Every 1978-1979 full-size Bronco came with four-wheel drive, a solid Dana 44 front axle, and a Ford 9-inch rear axle. The transfer case depended on the transmission: manual NP435 trucks used the gear-driven NP205 part-time case, while C6-automatic trucks commonly used the chain-driven NP203 full-time case, so full-time 4WD was available. The part-time NP205 should not be driven in 4WD on dry pavement, but the full-time NP203 can be left engaged on pavement. Front disc brakes were standard, with drums at the rear, the typical full-size light-truck setup of the period.
How many years was the second-generation Bronco built?
Only two model years, 1978 and 1979. Ford introduced the full-size Dentside Bronco for 1978 and replaced it for 1980 with a downsized "Bullnose" model, so the second generation is one of the shortest-lived Bronco generations.
Technical Reference
Member-uploaded diagrams & documents for this generation. AI-classified; community-verified where badged.
Service Procedures
- Battle Born Brakes hydroboost install page with plumbing diagram: super duty gear boxes use 18mm input and 16mm output, OEM boxes 1/2in input and 5/8in output; bench-bleed the master cylinder before installation.
- Service manual radio page describing how the circuit works (power through fuse 10 in RUN/ACCY) plus trouble-shooting steps for no sound and a 2-4 ohm speaker resistance check.
- Service-manual page explaining how the power brake booster, automatic transmission vacuum diaphragm and vacuum reserve tank work, with vacuum-gauge trouble-shooting steps (18 in-Hg hold spec).
- Vacuum system troubleshooting method (probability, speed, simplicity, elimination, certainty) and tool guide for using a vacuum gauge and Rotunda 21-0014 vacuum tester, with hose color designations.
- Cutaway locator for heater/AC and deluxe heater: blower motor, A/C heat function and selector controls, vacuum motors (outside-recirc, water valve, defrost), A/C clutch, and fuse block.
- Wiper/washer how-it-works and troubleshooting for conventional and intermittent wipers through fuse 11; lists wire 763 (o/w), 58 (w/o), 56 (bl) test points and C502 connector pinouts.
- Radio how-it-works and troubleshooting: powered via fuse 10 in RUN/ACCY; AM/AM-FM monaural use one dash speaker, AM/FM multiplex uses door speakers; check speaker resistance 2-4 ohms.
- Cutaway locator for accessory systems: AM/FM/CB radio, windshield washer/wipers, speed control actuator and sensor, horn, and Bronco power tailgate window on a Ford pickup.
- Fuel gage how-it-works and troubleshooting: instrument voltage regulator outputs ~5V pulsating; fuel sender resistance must be 8-66 ohms and gage 8-16 ohms, with test-light diagnostic steps.
- How-it-works and troubleshooting for oil pressure, brake, alternator warning lights and seat belt warning light/buzzer: switch positions, continuity, ground and switch-replacement steps.
- Cutaway locator for warning lights and gages: ammeter, fuel/water-temp/oil-pressure gages, brake warning, seat belt, 4-wheel-drive indicator, fuel tank selector switch, and sending units on a Ford pickup.
- How-it-works and troubleshooting steps for dome/dome-map (Bronco only)/courtesy lights through fuse 7, plus glove box and cargo light diagnosis, with partial wiring snippet.
- Cutaway locator drawing of interior lighting components: dome light, vanity mirror, cargo light, instrument illumination, dome/courtesy light switch, cigar lighter, and headlight switch on a Ford pickup.
- Troubleshooting text for turn signals, emergency warning flasher, stop lights, and backup lights: how each circuit works through fuse 9 (15A) plus step-by-step continuity and flasher replacement checks.
- Ford manual Exterior Lighting System page: headlight switch internal circuit breakers and single-lamp/headlight troubleshooting with dimmer-switch connector terminal diagrams (wire 285, 13, 12b, 25).
- Ford manual Starting/Ignition System page: starter, starter relay and ignition switch operation plus troubleshooting (jumper red/blue-stripe relay wire to battery positive, ignition module spark tests).
- Ford manual charging-system diagram plus component location/connector-description table (alternator, voltage regulator, starter relay, splices) and the alternator-regulator jumper-wire test setup.
- Ford manual Charging System page: how the alternator/voltage regulator/battery circuit works plus quick checks (belt tension, hydrometer >=1.230) and no-load voltage troubleshooting steps.
- Ford manual 'Trouble-Shooting...The Basics' page covering probability/speed/elimination method plus battery, alternator and vacuum-system quick checks and visual inspection tips.
- Ford troubleshooting manual page explaining electrical test tools - unpowered test light, self-powered test light, and jumper wire - with how-to steps for checking power and continuity.
- Speed control system service procedure covering ground brush removal/installation (via steering wheel and turn signal switch), control switch test, and speed sensor resistance test (680 ohms set-speed, 120 ohms coast).
- Ford shop-manual figure (section 37-01-10) showing cruise-control servo, bracket, valve/hose assembly and vacuum routing for 351/400 CID and 460 CID engines on F-100-F-350 and Bronco.
- Lakewood #21715 traction-bar instructions page 2: torque-steer correction by adjusting snubber gap, replacement urethane/rubber snubbers, Lakewood Industries technical-service contact, and photos of rear bracket and snubber location.
- Lakewood Industries #21715 traction-bar installation instruction sheet (duplicate of 845672), page 1: fits 1986-2000 Ford F-150 and 1973-87 Chevy/GMC 1/2-ton 2WD pickups, with prep and bracket mounting steps.
- Lakewood Industries #21715 traction-bar installation instruction sheet, page 1: fits 1986-2000 Ford F-150 and 1973-87 Chevy/GMC 1/2-ton 2WD pickups, covers vehicle prep and bracket/clamp mounting with 1/8 inch snubber gap.
Blueprints
- SolidWorks model of a complete custom front bumper assembly featuring a center winch recess and two round driving-light mounts at the ends.
- SolidWorks screenshot of a Front Bumper Assembly model showing a winch mounted in the center with transparent bumper shell and mounting brackets.
Wiring Diagrams
- Custom electric fan control wiring diagram for a 1995 Taurus 3.0L 2-speed setup using Holley Sniper EFI fan outputs, SPDT relays, a 175A MegaFuse and toggle switches.
- Bronco-only power rear window page with how-it-works text and wiring schematic: fuse 10 feed through accessory safety relay to the tailgate three-way switch and two-way motor.
- Radio wiring schematic showing the 7.5A fused feed in RUN/ACCY to AM/AM-FM monaural dash speaker and AM/FM stereo door speakers, with a component connector location table.
- Speed control wiring/operation page showing the servo, amplifier, speed sensor, switch positions (Off/On/Set/Coast), check valve and vacuum reserve tank, plus trouble-shooting steps.
- Heater/AC electrical wiring: blower motor, compressor clutch coil, de-icing switch, resistor pack through fuse 3; includes blower-speed continuity chart for wire 270 (bk/y) at connector C604.
- Heater-only blower wiring: 4-position blower switch and resistor pack fed through fuse 3 vary motor speed; includes terminal 3/4 diagnostic checks and a wiring diagram with connector table.
- Bronco power rear window wiring through fuse 10 and accessory safety relay to dash three-way switch and key-actuated tailgate switch; window motor with limit switch, plus troubleshooting steps.
- Radio wiring through fuse 12 (7.5A): AM/AM-FM monaural and AM/FM stereo radio speakers, CB radio choke and microphone, with door/cowl speaker connector locations and connector descriptions.
- Gage wiring through fuse 5: fuel sender, water temperature sending unit, oil pressure sender, and fuel tank selector valve/solenoid with connector C209-C339, splices and ground table.
- Warning-light wiring: dual brake warning switch, oil pressure switch (varies 300/351-400/450 CID locations), seat belt buzzer through fuse 4 (15A) and fuse (20A), with connector and ground table.
- Control and instrument cluster illumination wiring: light switch rheostat feeds fuse 2 to cluster lights; includes troubleshooting steps for dim/spotty illumination and a wiring diagram with connector table.
- Glove box and cargo lamp wiring: fuse 7 (15A, gray) feeds the in-line fuse, courtesy lamp switches, vanity mirror, cargo lamp switch, and digital AM radio display, with connector locations.
- Turn signal / emergency warning / stop light circuit: fuse 9 (15A) and stop light fuse (15A) feed plunger- and mechanical-type stop switches, turn signal switch, and flashers; shows trailer-tow option wiring.
- Backup lamp wiring for Bronco and F-100-350: separate paths for 3-speed/4-speed manual and automatic transmission backup-light switches through fuse 13, with connector and ground locations.
- Trailer wiring schematic tying stop light switch, turn signal flasher, emergency warning flasher, and trailer exterior light relay to the customer-installed trailer connector, with component locations.
- Bronco-only exterior lamp wiring: routes from light switch and dimmer switch through front marker lamps and trailer exterior light relay, with full connector/splice/ground location table.
- Exterior lights wiring schematic over a truck body cutaway (Bronco/F-series): headlights, parking/marker/license, turn signals, emergency warning, backup and stop lights with switch locations.
- Ignition system wiring schematic (Ford Duraspark) showing ignition module, coil, distributor, starter relay and engine speed sensor with cranking spark-test procedure (white wire voltage within 1 volt).
- Wiring schematic (Bronco/F100-350) of the headlight switch, ignition switch and 12-position fuse panel showing circuit feeds to accessories, seat belt, carburetor, backup lamps and warning systems.
- Power distribution and charging system wiring schematic (Bronco/F100-350) showing fuse links A-J, junction block, accessory safety relay, alternator and starter relay circuits with/without gauges.
- Main speed control system wiring diagram for Ford F-100/F-350 and Bronco showing speed control amplifier, servo throttle actuator, speed cable sensor, horn switch and 4-position control switch (OFF/ON/SET/COAST) with wire colors.
- Speed control (cruise) system wiring diagram for Ford F-100/F-350 and Bronco showing servo assembly, amplifier, speed sensor, brake switches, 20A fuse and the wire color/stripe code table by circuit number.
- Wire color code page covering circuits 908-998: starter motor relay lock-in coil, speed regulator/cruise control, trans neutral switch, throttle solenoid, emission modulator and turn signal switch circuits.
- Wire color code page covering circuits 701-834: CB radio (squelch, push-to-talk, scan), speaker, distributor electronic control, breakerless ignition module, fuel pump relay and speedo servo circuits.
- Wire color code page covering circuits 594-697: oil pressure safety, fuel pump primer, brake skid control module wheel sensors, EGR valve, fuel gauge and tractor-trailer controller circuits.
- Wire color code page covering circuits 374-585: emergency warning flasher, back window switch, seat belt warning relay, fog lamp switch and intermittent governor circuits with wire colors.
- Wire color code page covering circuits 208-371: water temp/delay relay, heater blower, emission control valve, 3-speed axle solenoid valves and alternator relay circuits with wire colors.
- Wire color code page covering circuits 90-207: windshield wiper ground, remote control mirror, power door lock motor, 2-speed axle, glow plug and radio circuits with wire colors.
- Clean standard wire color code page mapping circuits 1-95 to descriptions and wire colors (horn relay, turn signals, headlamp dimmer high/low, 24V alternator output, windshield wiper).
- Continued wire color code reference covering breakerless/transistor ignition (ballast resistor, pick-up coil), starter relay and speed/cruise control circuits with wire colors.
- Continued wire color code reference covering brake skid control module wheel sensors, thermocouple, EGR valve and oil temperature warning circuits with their wire colors.
- Continued wire color code reference mapping circuit numbers to descriptions and wire colors for HVAC, 3-speed axle, alternator and brake skid control circuits on a heavy-duty Ford truck.
- Standard wire color code reference table mapping circuit numbers to descriptions and wire colors (e.g. horn switch to horn relay, headlamp dimmer to high/low beams) for a Ford truck electrical system.
- Electronic engine control (4-cyl turbo) wiring schematic showing EEC power relay, ECA solid-state module, fuel pump relay, inertia switch, and EEC test connector grounds.
- Comparison wiring schematic for one-touch window modules: stock single-module wiring vs dual-module auto up-and-down setup fed by a 20A circuit breaker.
- Factory wiring diagram for the heater/AC blower-motor circuit: power distribution fuse panels, blower switch positions, blower motor resistors, A/C clutch solenoid, with connector C-590/C-533/C-580 pinout views.
- Final sheet of the Haynes 1979 Bronco wiring schematic showing remaining distribution circuits, splices and connectors with wire colors.
- Haynes 1979 Bronco wiring schematic (continued) showing transmission, lamp and connector circuits with splice and wire-color identification.
- Haynes Bronco wiring schematic (continued) showing connector S-201/S-202, fuse-link runs and transmission/instrument circuits with wire colors.
- Haynes 1979 Bronco wiring schematic (continued) detailing circuit runs, splices and connectors with wire-color and gauge identification.
- Haynes 1978/1979 Bronco wiring schematic showing power distribution, in-line connectors and fuse links with wire color and gauge callouts.
Fuse & Relay Charts
- Fuse block identification chart for Bronco/F-Series listing each fuse position, amp rating, feed wire color and protected circuit, alongside voltmeter/ohmmeter/ammeter usage notes.
- Welding power source electrical service guide: input amps, time-delay and normal fuse ratings, conductor AWG/length per phase and voltage, referencing 2008 National Electrical Code.
- Welding power source electrical service guide table giving input amps, time-delay/normal fuse ratings and minimum conductor AWG by 60 Hz single- and three-phase input voltage.
- Ford fuse-identification chart (Haynes manual page 12-6) for 1980-96 F-Series pickup and full-size Bronco listing each fuse position, amperage and protected circuit; example: stop/turn/hazard 15A, power windows/locks/seats 30A.
Vacuum Routing
- Vacuum distribution schematic routing engine vacuum to the power brake booster, A/C controls, automatic transmission diaphragm, speed control reservoir and EGR/EVAP.
- Vacuum routing schematic for temperature selector valve and a-port selector feeding water valve, outside-recirc, temp blend door, and panel/floor/defrost vacuum motors with color-coded hose paths.
- Heater/AC vacuum system operation plus a vacuum motor test chart listing applied vacuum (inches) per function/temperature lever position for outside, water, panel-floor, and heat-defrost motors.
- 1978 Ford emission-control vacuum routing diagrams for the 400 V8 pickup (Federal, automatic): EGR valve, EGR vacuum control valve, spark delay valve, PCV valve and vacuum amplifier hose paths.
- 1978 Ford exhaust-emission vacuum diagrams for the 400 V8 pickup/Bronco with automatic trans, showing EGR valve, spark delay valves, PVS, air pump and vacuum reservoir routing.
- Ford Important Vehicle Information (VECI) underhood decal for a 1986 E-250 351W 4V: timing/idle set procedures and vacuum hose routing schematic; base timing 10 BTDC.
- Heater/AC vacuum control diagram showing three-port and eight-port vacuum selector connectors, air blend door cable, blower switch, compressor clutch switch, and the 3-port connector color code (purple/turquoise/black).
Manual Pages
- Introduction page of the 1979 Ford F-100/350 truck and Bronco electrical/vacuum troubleshooting manual; lists the wire color/symbol designations (PC printed circuit, S splice, G ground) and contents index.
- Cover of the Ford 1979 Bronco / F100-350 Electrical & Vacuum Troubleshooting Manual; technician illustration with test equipment and the manual title.
- Ford shop-manual text page covering cruise-control diagnostic procedures: ~40-ohm speed sensor check, ~85-ohm servo coil test, amplifier and circuit tests, plus road test steps.
- 1973 Ford Truck Shop Manual page 15-30-5 detailing Dana 44 front-axle socket removal/installation; tighten bottom socket nut to 70-90 lb-ft and check steering effort.
- 1973 Ford Truck Shop Manual page 15-30-5 covering Dana 44-9F front driving axle knuckle removal and bottom-socket installation using spanner wrench T71T-3010-G.
- Owner's manual page covering hill-climb/downgrade towing technique plus Bronco trailer-towing package contents and weight ratings (GCWR up to 11,950 lb on 5.8L).
- Service-manual glossary page defining automatic-transmission and electronic-control terms: torque converter, TCC, TFT, TP, TR, traction control, transaxle, TCIL, TCS, TSS, two/three-way catalytic converter, VMV, VLCM.
Brochures & Literature
- E-Z-ON Universal Harness advertising literature: aftermarket lap/shoulder restraint for back-seat passengers, FMVSS tested, tilt-lock adjusters, rated 66-168 lb (mfg hardware over 66 lb).
- Ford brochure page on pickup camper loads detailing required equipment and the Camper Special package: extra cooling, heavy-duty alternator, ammeter, oil-pressure gauge and HD shocks.
- Ford light-truck brochure page on F-Series trailer-towing packages, listing tow ratings up to 10,000 lb for F-350 and SuperCab storage and seating options.
- Factory Bronco option/price list covering engine, cooling, transmission, axle and battery options; notes 5.8L (351)/6.6L (400) V-8, SelectShift automatic, Dana limited-slip front axle and 68-amp batteries.
- Photograph of the cover of Ford's 1979 Truck Wiring Diagrams training booklet (Course 0339-101, FPSD 365-247) rather than a diagram page itself.
- Ford recreation brochure page on the Camper Special Package for F-250/F-350 pickups: lists added load-carrying equipment (extra-cooling, heavy-duty battery, alternator, ammeter, oil-pressure gauge) needed to carry camper loads.
Schematics
- Master wiring-circuit legend listing circuits 835-907 with descriptions and wire colors (e.g. starter relay solenoid, ballast resistor, transistor ignition, cruise control switches).
- Hand-drawn electric fan wiring schematic; same fan/relay/thermostat layout noting keyed-circuit vs direct-battery 12V feed and 20A fuse for fan power.
- Hand-drawn electric fan wiring schematic showing fan relay, temp probe, thermostat trigger, 20A fuse, and 3-position manual-on/manual-off/auto-thermo switch.
Data/Spec Plates
- Mustang Dynamometer test report from G&S Racing (Ocala FL): engine torque and power curves vs RPM, peaking near 369 lb-ft, with AFR trace; run printed 2009/06/29.
- Dyno test results sheet for a 2002 Ford Mustang GT: max power 361.3 hp @ 5429 RPM and max torque 371.9 lb-ft @ 4624 RPM (WCF corrected), tested 6/29/2009.
- EEC Analyzer 2.7.0 fuel-delivery tab sizing for 500 HP / 8-cyl: needs 33.75 lb/hr injectors (using 42 lb/hr), fuel pump 292.50 lb/hr (40.34 gph), 43.5 PSI rated/line pressure, BSFC ~0.5.
Exploded Parts
- Ford service-manual exploded view and disassembly/assembly procedure for the non-tilt steering column with column shift on E-100 through E-350 vans (automatic and manual transmission).
- Ford steering column service (Fig.9): full exploded view of a tilt column showing turn-signal assembly, upper tilt flange, pivot pins, tilt actuator lever, Allen-head bolts/spacers, shift fork and column-to-gear flange.
- Ford steering column service (13-06-9, Fig.8): manual-transmission column exploded view with shift tube, flanges, fork and tilt mechanism; column-to-gear flange torque 28-35 ft-lbs.
- Ford steering column service (13-06-8, Fig.7): exploded view of non-tilt column with manual transmission showing turn-signal assembly, flanges, shift tube, fork and wave washer plus assembly steps.
- Ford steering column service (13-06-11): exploded view of wire bale, tilt locking lever, springs and flange bearings with Fig.11 pivot-pin removal using tool T70P-3D739-A.
- Component callout diagram of a Ford 8-cylinder distributor: cap, cap clip, adapter and adapter clip, terminals, distributor body, hold-down bolt and vacuum advance diaphragm.
The wall · registered 1978–1979 Broncos
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Full year-by-year change log: 1978-1979 Ford Bronco
This log tracks the model-year changes to the second-generation full-size Ford Bronco (1978-1979) at the level of platform, body, engine, drivetrain, axle, brakes, trim, and federally driven equipment. It is assembled from Ford factory shop manuals and parts catalogs for the 1973-1979 F-series and Bronco, VIN and door data-plate decoding for engine, axle, and trim verification, period factory specification sheets and road tests, and established full-size Bronco reference works and owner registries. Where a detail varied by emissions certification or by individual build, this log says so rather than asserting a single figure for the whole generation.
1978
- Introduced as the first full-size Bronco. The 1978 Ford Bronco replaced the compact 1966-1977 truck with a full-size, truck-based design, the model enthusiasts call the "Big Bronco."
- Dentside F-series platform. The 1978 Bronco moved onto the 1973-1979 F-100/F-150 platform, the body style collectors call "Dentside," rather than the compact early-Bronco chassis it replaced.
- New 104-inch wheelbase. The 1978 Bronco rode on a 104-inch wheelbase, longer than the early truck's 92 inches, with the wider track and larger cab of a full-size pickup.
- Removable fiberglass rear roof. The 1978 Bronco was a two-door wagon with a fixed front cab and a removable fiberglass top over the rear seating and cargo area, so the back could be opened up while the windshield, doors, and front roofline stayed in place.
- V8-only engine lineup. The 1978 Bronco was V8-only, using Ford's 335-series "Modified" engines: the 351 cubic-inch (5.8L) as standard and the 400 cubic-inch (6.6L) as the optional engine. These are tall-deck "M" engines, not the 351 Windsor or 351 Cleveland.
- Two transfer cases tied to the transmission. The 1978 Bronco's transfer case depended on which transmission a truck carried. Trucks with the NP435 4-speed manual used the gear-driven New Process NP205 part-time four-wheel-drive case, while trucks with the C6 automatic commonly used the chain-driven New Process NP203 full-time four-wheel-drive case. The NP205 setup is part-time, so the front axle is engaged only when the case is shifted into 4WD and the truck should not be driven in 4WD on dry pavement; the NP203 has an inter-axle differential and can be left engaged on pavement.
- Full-time 4WD availability. Because the C6-automatic trucks could carry the full-time NP203 transfer case, full-time four-wheel drive was available on the 1978 Bronco, an option that lets the truck stay in 4WD on dry pavement, unlike the part-time NP205 manual-transmission trucks.
- Dana 44 front axle, Ford 9-inch rear axle. The 1978 Bronco used a solid Dana 44 front axle and a Ford 9-inch rear axle, both heavier units than the early Bronco carried because the truck itself was heavier.
- NP435 4-speed manual, C6 automatic optional. The 1978 Bronco came with the New Process NP435 4-speed manual as the standard transmission and the C6 3-speed automatic as the option. The manual paired with the gear-driven NP205 part-time transfer case; the automatic commonly paired with the chain-driven NP203 full-time transfer case.
- Front disc brakes standard. The 1978 Bronco came with front disc brakes as standard equipment and drums at the rear, the normal full-size light-truck arrangement of the period.
- Trim levels and the Free Wheeling package. The 1978 Bronco was offered from the base Custom up through the Ranger XLT, with the Free Wheeling appearance package available for buyers who wanted the striped, blacked-out look of the era.
- Shared hardware with the F-series. Because the 1978 Bronco is mechanically a full-size F-series, many service and chassis parts interchange with 1973-1979 F-100 and F-150 pickups.
1979
- Final full-size Dentside year. The 1979 Bronco was the last full-size Dentside model before Ford downsized the truck onto the 1980 "Bullnose" platform, which makes 1978 and 1979 the only full-size Dentside Broncos.
- Engine lineup carried over. The 1979 Bronco kept the V8-only 335-series lineup, the 351 cubic-inch (5.8L) standard and the 400 cubic-inch (6.6L) optional, both "Modified" tall-deck "M" engines.
- Emissions hardware revised. Tightening federal emissions rules brought a catalytic converter and revised engine calibrations for 1979; the specific certification and calibration varied, so confirm an individual truck against its build data.
- Advertised power varied by calibration. Published output for the 1979 Bronco reflected the year's emissions calibrations, so confirm the figure for an individual truck rather than assuming a single number for the generation.
- Move toward rectangular headlamps on higher trims. The 1979 Bronco shifted its front-end appearance toward rectangular sealed-beam headlamps on many trucks, a higher-trim freshening rather than a universal change to every truck.
- Drivetrain and brakes unchanged. The 1979 Bronco continued with the NP435 4-speed manual standard and C6 3-speed automatic optional, the same two transfer cases tied to transmission choice (the gear-driven NP205 part-time case behind the manual, the chain-driven NP203 full-time case commonly behind the automatic), a solid Dana 44 front axle, a Ford 9-inch rear axle, and standard front disc brakes with rear drums. The part-time NP205 trucks should not be driven in 4WD on dry pavement, while the full-time NP203 trucks can be left engaged on pavement.
- Trim levels carried over. The 1979 Bronco continued to offer the base Custom and the Ranger XLT, with the Free Wheeling appearance package still available.
- Replaced for 1980. The 1979 Bronco was the end of this two-year platform; for 1980 Ford fielded a downsized, lighter Bronco on the new "Bullnose" F-series body, so 1978 and 1979 were the only Dentside-bodied (full-size) Broncos.