This option makes use of the fourth groove in the crankshaft pulley, and results in a dedicated AC drive belt.
I'm not sure where the bracket came from, but I suspect it was off of a car 390, as it was given to me by the PO of the F100 i bought back in '01. The F100 had a car 390 in it.
A side view of how the system looks.

This is how the bracket mounts to the engine.

This is how the bracket mounts at the alternator.

A pic of the compressor brace at the top of the compressor.

A pic of the brace at the exhaust manifold. Notice it has to mount using one of the manifold bolts.

A top view showing how the belts line up.

A file photo from this site. Someone else used this set up, and you can see how the belts are routed.

I have two compressors, one of which has a single pulley, and the other has a double pulley. The outer groove on the double pulley is the same distance from the compressor body as the groove on the single pulley is, so I could swap pulleys and not have an empty groove on the compressor. The compressor would be at a slight angle off vertical, though. But that shouldn't cause a problem.
This setup would allow a dedicated belt, and it wouldn't put such a load on the PS pump bearings. I'm pretty sure it isn't stock for a truck, though.
So: what do you all think? Any opinions on which setup i should go with?
