T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
57.1 | Do I need a rebuild? | ASABET::HAMEL | | Mon May 20 1991 11:09 | 12 |
| My Doug Nash may be in need of a rebuild soon. The second gear syncro
seems to be on it's way out. It shifts fine until I power shift.
Even with my foot all the way to the floor with the clutch I still
get a crunch if I pull back hard on the shifter going into second.
Anybody have any idea how much something like this costs to rebuild?
Any recomondations on shops? I've heard alot of good things about
Bill Belmore at Competition Gear.
Thanks,
Mark
|
57.2 | | CNTROL::REARWIN | the quality of mercy is not strained | Mon May 20 1991 12:55 | 6 |
|
You may want to talk to Steve Eaton in Shrewsbury. He works at home
and builds for racers. He rebuilt my Muncie, and since I needed an
input shaft, it got to be expensive. I'll look up the number and the
price for tomorrow.
Matt
|
57.3 | #wanted | AKOCOA::DENINE | | Tue May 28 1991 01:46 | 3 |
| reply to .2 could you post steves Phone # and address in here .
I will be needing to sub out a rebuild on a 4 spd saginaw trans
for a camaro.thanx
|
57.4 | Too many variables to remain a constant | HSOMAI::HARDMAN | ThunderTrucks of Texas | Fri Jun 21 1991 09:22 | 18 |
| Continuation of the torque converter discussion from notes 63.4-.12:
Tom, torque converter stall speeds are not a constant. A torque
converter that stalls at say 2,500 rpm in a 327 powered Vega, will
stall at a much higher speed in a blown 454 powered station wagon (just
had to use the Goose as an example!). ;-) Vehicle weight, gear ratios
and the amount of torque produced by the engine will affect the stall
speed. This is the reason behind having a range for the stall speed,
rather than just a hard number.
Before purchasing a converter, you need to contact the manufacturer and
tell them what kind of vehicle it will be going into. They should ask
you questions about the weight, gears, tire diameter, cam, and engine
displacement. Armed with this info, they can select the proper
converter for your specific application.
Harry
|
57.5 | Seems logical... | STEREO::BEAUDET | | Fri Jun 21 1991 09:53 | 3 |
| Thanks Harry....blown 454 huh? Hmmmmm.
/tb/
|
57.6 | Picking a nit | ACTION::AUGENSTEIN | | Fri Jun 21 1991 11:15 | 3 |
| Vehicl weight will *not* affect stall speed.
Bruce
|
57.7 | help with a GM 700 series | UPWARD::WOYAK | | Fri Jun 21 1991 11:49 | 17 |
| I have a bit of a problem with my trans. Perhaps one of you guys can
give some guidance..I have a aniversary T/A with the auto (700).I have
had the entire engine gone through (balanced, printed, ported, etc.)
373 rear, and a new beefed trans put in..I have had this combination
for a few years. I have started to have intermitent trouble with the
speedo..Once in a while it will not work. We have found the problem and
it is the actual gear in the trans..Apparently it was not put in just
right and now wobbles at times and when this happens the gear on the
cable is not turned hense no reading. To make a long store short I am
told the only way to repare this is to take the trans apart and put in
a new speedo gear..!!!..
Is this true..??..Are there any tricks I could use other
this..??.Perhaps someway I could take the play out..??..
Any help is appreciated.
Jim
|
57.8 | facts..... | CSC32::J_KALINOWSKI | Forget NAM?....NEVER! | Fri Jun 21 1991 12:16 | 18 |
|
YES! vehicle weight DOES play an important role in stall speed
under DRIVING conditions. Under full trrottle brake stand conditions
it does not unless the comparison engines are of lesser or greater
power output. To give an example the factory would never put the same
stall speed converter in a Suburban as in a nova using the same engine
and trans combinations. (its the weight difference) If you want, we can
start digging through about 70 or so books in my library dedicated to
transmission service that I accumulated in my tenure at AAMCO.
Another point.....Having a 2500 RPM stall converter does not mean
that the engine needs to reach that speed to get moving. If you step on
the gas....the vechicle will move immediatly. And you will only see a
small percentage of slippage at cruise RPM on the highway. Not only
that but stall speed is a function of power output....A wimpy engine
may not be able to approach the advertised stall speed.
-john
|
57.9 | 2200 stall | ZEKE::DEWYNGAERT | | Fri Jun 21 1991 20:11 | 14 |
| Very good point, made in the previous note!!! In my car (the 82
firebird mentioned earlier) there is no problem with highway driving
(at 2000 rmp) or with taking off from a light. I don't notice any
slipage at all. To give you an example my firebird idles at 750 rpm
and I have never had any problem with stalling or the car feeling
mushy.
I too was very curious when I was told to put a (2200 stall
converter in) At the time I thought that the car would note leave
a stop sign until the rpms got to 2200 but I soon found out that
this is not the case.
Hope this helps
Dave D.
|
57.10 | Agreed | ACTION::AUGENSTEIN | | Mon Jun 24 1991 08:31 | 6 |
| I agree with 8 and 9, although this doesn't negate my original point. The
slip rate and average rpm with a given converter will vary greatly depending
on vehicle weight, but "stall speed" is a very specific and formal measured
value. That's what I was responding to.
Bruce
|
57.11 | | TINCUP::MFORBES | This Space Intentionally Left Blank | Mon Jun 24 1991 08:39 | 8 |
| re. speedo gear
It sounds like the problem may be with the drive gear. There are two gears.
The drive gear and the driven gear. If the drove gear is the problem, you
can (if the 700 is like the 350/400) get to it by removing the drive shaft
abd then the transmission tailshaft.
Mark
|
57.12 | More questions | CUJO::BROWN | Dave Brown | Mon Jun 24 1991 21:10 | 18 |
|
Re .8
Good stuff! It leaves me with two questions however:
1) Define Stall Speed. What specific factors weigh into formulate
the stall speed parameter?
2) What would be a good brand, model and stall speed of converter
to go with for my application?
Application:
- '68 Firebird w/ Approx 550HP 455 and TH400.
- Want the ability to drive it on the street and strip.
Dave
|
57.13 | MEMBER ???'S | COGITO::MEINERS | | Mon Jul 01 1991 12:20 | 6 |
| I'm thinking of putting a th400 in my 80'Camaro.. They didn't come
stock with these in the later years so....can I use a crossmember
off of an earlier Camaro or should I make the th350 member work.??
Thanx,
Mike...
|
57.14 | If they fit...get the earlier one. | STEREO::BEAUDET | | Mon Jul 01 1991 12:37 | 24 |
| There are two things to keep in mind with the trans mount.
1. How to get it to fit
2. How to get duals under it.
The fit problem can be solved on some by using the TH350 mount and
moving it back so the front holes of the mount line up with the
rear holes in the frame. Then you drill two new holes for the rear of
the mount. This doesn't work on all body types but you might get your
tape measure out and see if it's possible.
If a mount from an earlier year can be found that handles the TH400
you may get lucky and find one that also allowed for dual pipes.
Without that type you will have to micky-mouse either the tranny mount
or the driver side pipes to get under the mount....
I'd look for the earlier mount for the dual exhaust TH400...make life
lot's easier.
/tb/
|
57.15 | Revs between gears | WLDWST::MARTIN_T | Too Smooth | Mon Jul 29 1991 12:27 | 44 |
|
I have a problem I m not able to figure out concering my car. I
believe it to be a tranny problem.
I drive a '72 Charger with a 400cid engine. The engine is internally
stock with add-ons. By this I mean the stock manifold/carb, exuast
system, ignition, and smog system have been altered. At its curreent
state the car has this set up:
400cid engine/ high-rise intake manifold with a 1850 holley
universal 4-barrel/ mallory competition ignition with a promaster
coil/ duel exuast with eagle headers.
727 torqflyte auto'transmission with a B&M shift kit/ 8/4 posi rearend
ALL smog taken off.
THE PROBLEM:
When the car tries to shift into second gear it sometimes revs
at more than 1000rpms until it actually clicks into gear. So,
if I go slow or fast it wines big time then goes into gear. It
feels as if something is slipping because its not a smooth
trans-action. The last gear (kick down?) used to change at 90mph
but nothing happens now. When cruising at 50mph and Id step on it
the car used to "kick down" and take OFF. It does do that anymore.
I looked at the kick down lever and its okay.
Thanks for any advice.
Tom
|
57.16 | Linkage adjustment likely. | TUNER::BEAUDET | | Mon Jul 29 1991 12:52 | 9 |
| Did this start after you made some modifications that required the
linkages, suach as the kick-down to be removed and re installed?
Not sure on that vehicle but on a GM you need to adjust the kick-down
linkage when ever you play with it. It's a simple procedure but as I
mentioned I'm not sure about yours. That's what it sounds like though.
/tb/
|
57.17 | Check you kick -down linkage! | VCSESU::D_SMITH | | Mon Jul 29 1991 13:10 | 6 |
| re:- Is the kick-down even installed??? If not, expect to rebuild the tranny if
you continue driving it...may even be too late. If it is installed,
adjust for full throttle, full kinkdown.
Dave'
|
57.18 | | WLDWST::MARTIN_T | Too Smooth | Mon Jul 29 1991 14:39 | 7 |
|
Ive been driving 2 years with this set-up. The kickdown lever is fine.
This problem has just began in the last week.
tom
|
57.19 | Rebuild time... | VCSESU::D_SMITH | | Tue Jul 30 1991 08:44 | 7 |
| Then the tranny just can't handle the beating, which is simular
to what my B727 goes thru with a 440 in front of it...a rebuild every
few years to get back to those crisp shifts. Also torque converters
don't last forever either!
Dave'
|
57.20 | Oh well | WLDWST::MARTIN_T | Too Smooth | Tue Jul 30 1991 09:46 | 22 |
|
I must admit, I do punch it quite often. (Like everytime Im in the
car :-).
How much do rebuilds cost? Do they use the same one or a completely
different one.
tom
|
57.21 | Just a standard rebuild should do | VCSESU::D_SMITH | | Wed Jul 31 1991 13:17 | 9 |
| Typically around $350 here in the east cost...know idea what you'll pay
out there, but if it's like anything else out there...you'll most
likely pay less. Save yourself some money, and maybe future headaces
and take it out yourself and drop it off at a shop (transmission shop).
Clutches and bands are all I replace for returned crispness.
Dave'
|
57.22 | The long project | WLDWST::MARTIN_T | Too Smooth | Wed Jul 31 1991 15:35 | 10 |
|
Sounds good. Problem is that I havent been able to find a Shop Manual
for my make and model. When it comes to car mechanix Im pretty much a
novice. I learn as I go along. Thanks for the advice.
tom
|
57.23 | Thery're Not for sale 8^)! | EXPRES::JMALESKY | | Tue Aug 27 1991 08:08 | 11 |
| Does anyone know how to identify Muncie 4-speeds? I have a few complete
ones and a box of parts that used-to-be one. I'd like to find out how
to decifer the date codes on them and find out exactly what I have.
M-21, M-20, Close ratio, wide, what do the rings on the input shaft
mean? I believe they all have the coarse spline inputs. One has no
rings, one has two, another has one. ??? Doesn't this tell if its a
2.20:1 first gear or whatever?
Thanks,
John
|
57.24 | | CRISTA::ROCHE | | Tue Aug 27 1991 08:32 | 9 |
| M20 has a coarse spline with 2 grooves, wide ratio 2.52 1st
M21 has a coarse spline with 1 groove, close ratio 2.20 1st
from 63-65 Muncies had no grooves
Chris
|
57.25 | | EXPRES::JMALESKY | | Tue Aug 27 1991 12:13 | 7 |
| So how do I tell if the ones with no grooves are close/wide?
Count the input/output revolutions in first gear and figure it out?
What is the Muncie,(besides the M-22), that has a fine spline input
shaft and large tail shaft? I was told This was an M-21...
How about the date codes?
John
|
57.26 | For what it's worth | RANGER::BONAZZOLI | | Thu Aug 29 1991 11:13 | 11 |
| I will take a stab at it from my limited knowledge of Muncie's.
If it has a fine input and a large output it should be a close ratio.
If it has no grooves I thought that meant M22, but check also for a
tranny drain plug separate from the filler plug. Compare the cuts of
the gears with the inspection plate removed. You can tell by comparing
that the M22's gears are straighter cut.
By the way the close ratio tranny's are a pain if you do not have the
appropriate rear gears.
Rich
|
57.27 | some info | CNTROL::REARWIN | the quality of mercy is not strained | Thu Aug 29 1991 12:18 | 5 |
| I have the fine input with one or two grooves (sorry I forgot), large
output, and it is a wide ratio. The Chevrolet Power Manual in the
Corvette section describes Muncies. I'll look it up and post the
answers.
Matt
|
57.28 | Numbers game | EXPRES::JMALESKY | | Tue Sep 10 1991 11:42 | 19 |
| re:.23
Here's what I have: All have Coarse spline input shaft.
Main case casting number: Grooves: Stamped on right side of casing, left:
----- ----
3851325 none P0215 G13 4516
3851325 none P0215 S110478
3925660 one P8T84 none
3885010 two P7T21 7P187675
Anyone have a book to look these numbers up?
John
|
57.29 | Muncie Numbers | CTOAVX::KWOLEK | | Wed Sep 11 1991 11:30 | 28 |
| re .28
Some of the numbers "work" and some don't. First of all, the
casting part number (3851325) doesn't help too much. All the different
trannies used the same shell for the same year. The second number
(P0215) is the build date for the tranny. The "P" means Muncie In.,
the 02 mean Feb. and the 15 means the 15th. So the first tranny was
built on Feb 15th. There is no info on the year. However, there may
be a date cast into the tranny case that would get you in the ballpark.
The third number is the VIN of the car. G13x4516 would probably be a
Chevelle.
In 1967 the format changed a little. The "P" still stands for
Muncie but the next number is the last number of the year. The next
letter stands for the month (with a special code) and the last two are
the day.
The third tranny listed would be 1968, dec 84th!!! Could you have
misread it?
The second tranny is from a Corvette with a VIN of S110478. Hey
wait!!!!!! That's the tranny that someone stole from my '63 Vette!!!!!
Only kidding!!!!!!
The fourth tranny was built it 1967 Dec 21st. 7P187675 is the car
VIN, but I wasn't able to find P as an assembly plant.
Recheck your numbers. As far as M22, M21, or M20, the part number
will give you this. Without the tag, you need to take the thing apart
to see what you have.
Regards, John
|
57.30 | How about another one? | CUJO::BROWN | Dave Brown | Sat Sep 14 1991 08:26 | 20 |
|
While we're at it, how about the Muncie that I took out of my
Firebird? I don't think its original but it may be, couldn't match the
left side number in any way with the VIN. Also, how much are these
things worth?
Right Left
----- ----
P7S04 7 158016
Let me try my hand at it - November 4th 1967? That would put it about
right for my '68 Firebird but the VIN still remains a mystery. This should
be the last 6 digits of the actual VIN shouldn't it? The same number you'd
find on the original engine block?
Thanks!
Dave
|
57.31 | TH400 question.... | DNEAST::WHITE_BRYAN | Stupid people shouldn't breed.. | Mon Sep 16 1991 10:17 | 15 |
|
Quick question:
Current '79 OLDS has a TH400 out a Pontiac. It is the
"short-shaft" version. What can I use to replace it?
Insides were "FRIED" by #1 son this weekend....to quote
him, "2nd seems to be the only gear and no reverse..."
I have a line on a couple of TH350's but want to be sure
to have a match BEFORE pulling the old tranny...
Inputs appreciated...
Bryan
|
57.32 | Prices go up and down a bit | RANGER::BONAZZOLI | | Mon Sep 16 1991 11:11 | 8 |
| re .30
I can't help you with the numbers, but my brother has been buying and
selling Muncie's for a few years now and a couple of months back he got
$500.00 for an M22 in nice shape. The M21's command lower prices
around $300-$400 for good ones.
Rich
|
57.33 | Look it over! | RAVEN1::TURNER | A'64ToplessTripower4-SpeedGTOtogo! | Tue Sep 17 1991 13:12 | 8 |
| re. -31
The TH350 you have or are looking at will bolt up as long as it is
of the pontiac, olds, buick, caddy type. You will have to change the
yoke from the 400 to the 350 type. Also according to which 350 you may
get you may have a problem with the kick down mechanism.
Rod.
|
57.34 | Could be PRICELESS! | CTOAVX::KWOLEK | | Tue Sep 17 1991 14:44 | 14 |
| re .30
Dave,
You did a pretty good analysis. However, I'm puzzled by the
7 158016 number. There should be a letter where you have a space.
The letter would give you the assembly plant where the car with that
VIN was built. With that info you would know what kind of car it came
out from. Reply .32 is about right with the prices, except in the case
that you could find the right person that is restoring a 1968 Corvette
and all they need is the "original" tranny to have a matching numbers
car!!!! Then you could name your price. There is a company somewhere
that for a fee, will try to match up parts and their original cars.
Regards, John
|
57.35 | ATF? | CUJO::BROWN | Dave Brown | Thu Dec 05 1991 01:34 | 12 |
|
Does anyone have an opinion (sure to get a response with that
intro...) regarding the best ATF other than synthetic that one could
obtain? I'm looking at filling my TH-400 and my opinion is that Kendall
is about the best in this category in fact, I've already picked up a
case.
Ans now after-the-fact, I am interested to know of any good ATF
stories and what the various recommendations would be.
Dave
|
57.36 | | CRISTA::ROCHE | | Thu Dec 05 1991 14:39 | 1 |
| Have you thought about using the B & M Trickshift ATF?
|
57.37 | A/T initial ATF filling procedure | CUJO::BROWN | Dave Brown | Mon Dec 09 1991 19:46 | 24 |
|
I'm going to be assembling my TH400 and converter to my 455 this
weekend and want to make sure I get the ATF in the right places at the
right time. I have a procedure I got from a transmission shop a while
ago regarding doing this with a TH350. I'll enter the instructions
next, please feel free to comment on them:
1) Put about 1 pint of ATF in Torque Converter prior to assembly
with transmission and engine.
2) When ready to start engine, lift vehicle so all 4 wheels are off
the ground.
3) Add 4 quarts ATF to transmission.
4) Start engine and immediatly add more ATF until correct level is
reached.
5) Run transmission through all gears 2-3 times to lubricate
transmission.
6) Check level, add ATF as required.
|
57.38 | | TINCUP::MFORBES | But, this one goes to 11... | Tue Dec 10 1991 06:35 | 9 |
| Dave,
That is how I filled my TH-350 when I put Vega #1 together. It worked
fine. 4 to start and then I added about 6 more when I fired it up..
Have fun installing the engine and tranny. I installed the 327 in the
Vega on Sunday. The Tranny goes in tonight.
Mark
|
57.39 | ex | LJOHUB::BEAUDET | Tom Beaudet | Tue Dec 10 1991 11:45 | 5 |
| That the way I've done it..have plenty of ATF on hand and DO NOT REV
THE ENGINE! Just a nice idle will do.
/tb/
|
57.40 | Can't idle a new cam | TINCUP::MFORBES | But, this one goes to 11... | Tue Dec 10 1991 13:19 | 10 |
| Tom,
The only problem with the don't rev it scenario is that in my case and
probably Dave's too, is the engine is brandy new. You can't idle a new
cam.
I had a buddy there dumping ATF in as I initially set the "idle" at
2800 rpm to break in the cam.
Mark
|
57.41 | Takes quite a while to fill | HSOMAI::HARDMAN | Talk softly, carry a big gun... | Tue Dec 10 1991 15:09 | 8 |
| It took 14 quarts to get the 4WD version (Extra deep pan) of the Turbo
400 in the ThunderTruck(tm) to the full mark! The bands didn't engage
until we got to around the 10 quart mark. I'd guess that you could put
considerably more than 1 pint in the converter before starting, but
that's probably enough to insure that things stay lubed during filling.
Harry
|
57.42 | What's a few pints between friends? | LJOHUB::BEAUDET | Tom Beaudet | Wed Dec 11 1991 15:18 | 11 |
| I hear ya Mark...I had the same problem once...I used 2000 RPM to break
the cam in and it didn't foam the ATF...that's what your trying to
avoid...you should be OK.
Harry, the first time I filled one that I had drained the converter on
I kept looking under the car to see if it was leaking out someplace!
My instructions had a missprint that said it would take 12 pints...it
should have said 12 quarts!
/tb/
|
57.43 | gears and fluids | WLDWST::BROGDEN | | Wed Jan 29 1992 14:28 | 22 |
| On the gear problem for the 700 tranny...I assume it's a chevy 700R4??
There are (I believe) 3 different driven gear housings...2 for sure
that house the different gear ratios depending on what rearend gearing
you are running. The driven gears are different colors and tooth
pitches. There is an o-ring seal on this housing. Be sure not to damage
this on installation (lube with tranny fluid). It could be that the
oring has bound the proper installation of this housing and the gears
just aren't meshing correctly. Have you changed the rear axle ratio?
Speedometers are all corrected by knowing what percentage you are off
in mph and adding or subtracting that many percentage in the number of
teeth on the driven gear. Don't fall for the ol trick that 1 tooth
equals X amount of mph when trying to correct this problem.
FWIW....I've always run Ford ATF in my Chevy tranny's. I've used them
in power glides, TH350, and mostly in the TH400's. The reason is that
the Ford fluids will take a higher heat load than the fluid recommended
for chevy's. I have never ever had tranny failures except in one TH350
where the shift lever came out of the spring-clip holder internally.
(could this be because the ford tranny's run too hot from the factory
and wearout sooner...hence the higher quallity of fluid required? :-) )
Bruce
|
57.44 | duster 4sp problems | SALEM::LEAVENWORTH | | Fri Jan 31 1992 06:48 | 15 |
| Dodge truck tranny problems
I have a 79 Dodge pickup with a hipo 340 and a 4 spd tranny from a
73 Duster 340. The input shaft bearing is on its way out. What I need
to know is what is the tranny number so I can order the correct input
shaft and bearings. I looked last night and these are the only numbers
I can find on it, 3A I called a Dodge dealer and he could not find
C97372
a match or a cross reference. I found these numbers on the passenger
side of the tranny. Any help would be great. Any suggestions of shops
for "resonably priced" repairs would also be helpful. I live in
Haverhill,Ma. and work in Salem ,NH. I have one quote of $600.00 I
think this is very high.
thanks, Dana DTN:285-3489
|
57.45 | Speedo drive gear? | TINCUP::MFORBES | It's NOT your father's Chevy Vega | Wed Feb 12 1992 18:21 | 7 |
| Does anyone know how to figure out what driven gear is needed for the
transmission to calibrate a speedometer? I have a 21 tooth gear in
there now and the speedometer reads 25% high. Do I need a gear with
more teeth, less teeth, and just how many more or less teedh do I need?
Thanks,
Mark
|
57.46 | Ask the experts | HSOMAI::HARDMAN | Life's too short to drive a Honda | Wed Feb 12 1992 18:30 | 8 |
| Mark, there's a speedo shop in the Springs that can help you out. I
can't remember the name of the place, but they're near downtown. A
quick check of the yellow pages should find it for you. If you can't
find a close match, they can build a ratio converter to install inline
with the speedo cable. It costs around $50.
Harry
|
57.47 | 5mph per tooth | CXCAD::FRASER | | Thu Feb 13 1992 06:13 | 6 |
| Hi,,,
The driven gear that connects to the cable is 5 mph per tooth...
The more teeth, the slower the speedo reading...
Brian...
|
57.48 | What's it on? | LJOHUB::BEAUDET | Tom Beaudet | Thu Feb 13 1992 06:49 | 8 |
| What kind of transmission is this for. GM TH350s can take driven gears
from 18-29 teeth I believe. If you need more than 29 (after you do some
multiplying ) you will need to change the drive gear as well.
There are also reduction gears available that go between the cable and
the trans...speedo shop should be able to help.
/tb/
|
57.49 | | TINCUP::MFORBES | It's NOT your father's Chevy Vega | Thu Feb 13 1992 12:47 | 8 |
| Yes, it is a TH350. I know that at 50 mph it is reading 62. I now have
a 21 tooth gear in there. Based on what Brian said, a 23 should get me
close.
True?
Thanks,
Mark
|
57.50 | Taller slicks :^) :^) | COMET::LEWISJ | jim | Thu Feb 13 1992 15:33 | 6 |
| Mark,
If speedometers were linear which they are not it would take 26
teeth. I'd bet 24 would be about right if you are not planning on
different size rear tires.
Jim L
|
57.51 | Mebbe.......... | SANTEE::AUGENSTEIN | | Thu Feb 13 1992 16:00 | 15 |
| .......but if it's going 25% too fast, and it's the *driven* gear, then
26 teeth should be just about right on.
62 21
-- X -- = 1.0015384 = 1/10th of 1% error. That's close enough
50 26
for government work :-).
Bruce
PS - I am *not* an expert, so if it doesn't work in a plain old arithmetic
way, then I'm lost. I can't believe that 5mph per tooth applies to any
car, with any gearing, however. (I assume that meant 5 mph at 60.)
|
57.52 | LERNERS | COMET::GORSKI | | Thu Feb 13 1992 22:13 | 3 |
| try lerners on the pie cut corner off of weber and sierra madre.
dave
|
57.53 | Worked for me...I think... | CXCAD::FRASER | | Fri Feb 14 1992 06:25 | 8 |
| Hi,,,
I was told the 5 MPH bit by a parts guy at the local chevy dealer. I
have found this guy to be very knowledgeable. I replaced the driven
gear in my trany with one 3 teeth larger, and it dropped aprox 15 mph.
Maby mathimaticly that didn't happen, but I sure believe it did... (-:
Take it for what you will...
Brian...
|
57.54 | This month's Street Rodder or American Rodder, I think | MVDS02::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Fri Feb 14 1992 07:53 | 11 |
| I have a friend in "upstate" new your who calibrates speedometer drive
systems at street rod meets and he mentioned that:
The speedometer cable should 1000 turns per mile. All domestic automobiles
use this standard. Foreign autos go as high as 1054 revs per mile.
There's an article in one of the current-issue street rod magazines
speaking to this very subject. I'll try and see which one it is. I get a
bunch of them monthly.
|
57.55 | Mile marker checks | TUNER::BEAUDET | Tom Beaudet | Fri Feb 14 1992 08:41 | 6 |
| The more accurate way to determine the error is to check the odometer
reading agains mile markers. I usually do it each mile for 5 miles
and then take the average error as the one to work with.`
/tb/
|
57.56 | wanna try this?.... | CSC32::J_KALINOWSKI | Forget NAM?....NEVER! | Fri Feb 14 1992 08:45 | 10 |
|
Mark...what skip said was correct. If you would like to use this
method; I have a hand held Digital tach that can clamp onto your cable
and tell us exactly how many times it rotates in a measured mile.
You get the idea....Pull over at a measured mile mark, drive to the
next one.... I am not in the building this week but I will be back
on the 24th....Let me know. With this method we can be accurate
to within .00001% (-;
-john
|
57.58 | Get the drive straightened out, then check the head | MVDS02::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Mon Feb 17 1992 11:05 | 15 |
| Once you have the odometer reading correctly the needle should read
correctly as well. If the oddo is correct and the needle isn't, the speedo
head will have to be degaussed and re-magnetized before adjustments to the
return spring can be made.
The return spring's linearity across the entire range of the needle
movement is dependent on specific drag induced by the magnetic drive
mechanism.
This is a job for a speedometer calibration shop because simply "adjusting"
the return spring will only make the needle accurate for a narrow window
within the entire range. Calibration shops have the necessary equipment to
properly magnetize the drive mechanism first.
skip
|
57.59 | got it backwards last time, shoulda had the book w/ me | MVDS02::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Wed Feb 19 1992 05:50 | 32 |
| The article RIGHT ON was in the August '91 Rod & Custom magazine.
Essentially, you remove the speedo cable from the speedo and count the
revolutions over a specified distance. (or use a counter like John
Kalinowski has)
Typically, folks measure out 52' 9 1/2" and count the revs whilst
traveling this distance.
52' 9 1/2" is 1/100 of a mile (52.8')
You should have exactly 10 revolutions for traveling 1/100 of a mile.
If you count the revolutions and carefully approximate the last fractional
revolution you can then multiply the result by 100 to get the revs per
mile. It should equal 1000 for a domestic speedometer. Japanese
speedometers will be slightly higher while European speedometers will be in
the 15XX range. (The number of revs per mile is usually silk screened on
the dial of KPH/MPH European speedometers)
Take the gear out of your transmission, count the teeth and apply the
following formula:
# of teeth on your speedo X number of revs per mile gear / number of
teeth required on speedo gear X 1000
or;
number of teeth in your gear X number of revolutions per mile
_____________________________________ = # of teeth required in new gear
1000
|
57.60 | | WLDWST::BROGDEN | | Wed Feb 19 1992 10:33 | 13 |
| Also, as I mentioned earlier, when a parts man tells you one tooth
equals "X" miles per hour, he doesn't know what he is talking about.
The speedo is corrected as Skip pointed out if you have time to do
that. The easiest method is to use the mile markers or someone elses
car and mark off a mile. Check your odometer against this and figure
out the % off. In your case 25%. Pull the driven gear and add or
subtract 25% of the number of teeth on the driven gear.
25% of 21 is 5.25. So you need a driven gear with 26.25 teeth or 26
rounded off.
Remember teeth are figured in percentages not the shade tree method of
1 tooth equals X miles per hour.
BB
|
57.61 | Glitch encountered, back on track soon | TINCUP::MFORBES | It's NOT your father's Chevy Vega | Wed Feb 19 1992 12:47 | 10 |
| Thanks for all the input. I've not had time to work on it and probably
won't this week. John K. loaned me his tach to do the speedo cable rev
count. I wanted to get my new wheels and tires installed so I'd only
have to do the calibrarion once.
Now the rear tires are having a close personal relationship with the
fender lip. As soon as that gets solved, I'll mark off a mile and use
John's tach to check things out.
Mark
|
57.62 | As the tranny slips... | CUJO::BROWN | Dave Brown | Mon Mar 02 1992 20:58 | 24 |
|
Well, the next topic to address regarding the Moderator's tire
burning 455 Firebird is the transmission. I noticed quite early on that
the shifting of my TH-400 wasn't quite as crisp as one might want it,
in fact the shifting between 2nd and 3rd doesn't happen at all under
hard acceleration unless you back off on the throttle a bit. Doesn't
make any difference if you shift it automatically or not.
Tonight, I finally got ahold of my transmission builder Al, to tell him
about the problem. He was not a happy camper. He said that the problem
was probably one of the valve body and recommended that I pull the pan
and re-torque the valve body bolts. If that doesn't fix it, he said
we'd have to pull the tranny and put it back on the bench. I asked him
if the ATF I was using could have anything to do with it. He said not
unless you're using that B&M Trick-Shift crap! Al's going to come over
to my house on Wednesday night and we're going for a ride.
Anyone ever had these kind of problems with a TH-400 before? What
did it turn out to be? Al gave me a 12 month warranty so I plan to get
him to at least help me fix this problem. More to follow....
Dave
|
57.63 | Converter slip or tranny slip? | TINCUP::MFORBES | It's NOT your father's Chevy Vega | Tue Mar 03 1992 07:47 | 16 |
| Dave,
Did he say anything about the converter contributing to soft shifts? When you
took me for a ride, the tranny seemed to shift ok, just soft. I did not notice
any rpm increase like it was slipping on a shift.
After riding in your Firebird, the Vega seems slow. I may have to pull the
engine next winter and "tweek" it. That 455 is one running beast! You do need
to enhance the traction a little bit though...
Your speedometer correction should be easy. I just did mine. It cost $35 for
a ratio adaptor box and they can make one with any ratio that you need. It is
now only off by 2mph which is quite acceptable. Then you wouldn't have to use
your correction chart anymore. :-)
Mark
|
57.64 | Hope to be driving the TPI 383 powered ThunderTruck(tm) | HSOMAI::HARDMAN | Life's too short to drive a Honda | Tue Mar 03 1992 20:43 | 6 |
| Dave and Mark, I'll be in Colorado around the first week in August on
my way to a huge 4WD event in the Glenwood Springs area. Please plan on
taking me for some 'joy rides'!!!! :-)
Harry
|
57.65 | | TINCUP::MFORBES | It's NOT your father's Chevy Vega | Wed Mar 04 1992 06:48 | 9 |
| Harry,
You got it! A warning though, my Vega is rather tame in comparison to Dave's
Firebird. Just let us know when. If you want cheap lodging while in the
Springs, I always have have room at the house. BTW, if you're interested, the
Super Chevy Show is either (can't remember) the first or second weekend of
August up at Bandimere.
Mark
|
57.66 | OK | CUJO::BROWN | Dave Brown | Wed Mar 04 1992 08:25 | 7 |
|
We'll do it Harry! Just hope my tranny isn't in 2000 peices all
over my shop at that time. Remember your eyeball reinforcers to keep
'em in the right shape!
Dave
|
57.67 | If his bride isn't around.... | WFOV11::KOEHLER | Who turned off the Tunnel light? | Wed Mar 04 1992 11:01 | 9 |
| Dave,
Just hand Harry a 16oz. Bud, hit the loud peddle and he'll be just
fine.
The Mad Weldor....Jim
he'll have to come up East way next spring to find out what power
to weight ratio really is....i.e. low cubes/low weight... :-)
Sorta like the Vaga, only in a Ford model.
|
57.68 | It wasn't a pretty sight..... | NWTIMA::BERRYDO | Shiny side UP | Thu Mar 05 1992 16:04 | 10 |
| Dave,
I had a similar problem with the TH400 in my race car. It turned out to
be a shattered piston in the high gear clutch pack. The piston looks
like a ring and is about 3/8" thick and is pushed by the seals. It
started as a balky 2-3 shift and progressed to no high gear. It also
burned the high gear clutches. Maybe a check of pump pressure might
also be in order.
Don Berry
|
57.69 | Update on transmission shift problem | CUJO::BROWN | Dave Brown | Wed Apr 15 1992 11:50 | 16 |
|
Oh yea, I'd better update you all on the status of the tranny in my
Firebreather.
Ol' Al said "Yea that's not very good" when I took him for a ride,
so I took in the car to the shop to have him have a look at it. What he
did is to adjust the pressure regulator. Now, the 1-2 shift is quite
crisp and will break the tires off the pavement. But the 2-3 shift is
still a little soft, can't break the tires loose. Called up Al and he
said said that he'd have to disassemble the transmission to fix that
up. I decided that it probably isn't worth it. Just hope it doesn't get
worse. If I was building the car purely for race, I might be concerned.
We'll see....
Dave
|
57.70 | Just Do It... | NWTIMA::BERRYDO | Shiny side UP | Wed Apr 15 1992 15:34 | 14 |
|
Dave,
I just reduced the pressure in my turbo 400 because it was shattering
the pressure ring in the high gear clutch pack. The symptom was a
fading 2-3 upshift until finaly 3rd and reverse were gone. Replacing
the clutches, seals and steel plates is a simple operation that can be
done without any special tools. For the best results get clutches for
an Allison (they have a waffel pattern) and set the clearance to about
.060". Also replace the intermediate snap ring with a heavy duty one.
All the parts for mine cost less than $50. If you have any questions
let me know.
db
|
57.71 | The transmission - she is toast.
| JOAT::GOEHL | I'm scratchin' the itch. | Fri Jun 26 1992 08:59 | 32 |
| For 80,000 miles the stock Borg-Warner T-5 in my 1988 Mustang GT has provided
excellent service. Much better then its reputation would have predicted. I
figure that changing the fluid every 5,000 to 10,000 miles, and not using
slicks at the dragstrip, is responsible for its longevity. I showed no mercy
while making hundreds on strictly powershifting runs. Hell, it even survived
a short stint with nitrous oxide!
So what the hell happened?!
In the last 10,000 miles, and less then 100 runs at the strip, I've ruined 2
3rd gears and 2 mainshafts. Neither has failed, but both have suffered
irrepairable damage such that I get strong whine and shifter vibration while
in 4th and 5th gear. I beleive the problem to be roller bearing indentations
on the mainshaft, and 3rd gear. Apperently the roller sleeve that 3rd gear
rides on is denting the mainshaft and the gear - presumably upon engagement
while powershifting. In 4th and 5th gear, third is freewheeling on the
mainshaft and vibrating/resonating while the rollers go in and out of the
indentations. This is my best determination at whats making the noise. After
numerous teardowns, the roller impressions are the ONLY damage to the gearbox.
I bought a new Motorsport (2.95:1 low) T-5, which is showing the same damage;
although its not hitting the resonant vibration yet. I can here the prelude
frequency of whinning, and I'm sure the vibration is coming.
At $230-$380 for a new mainshaft at oil change intervals I have to do something!
So far, the only solution I can come up with is to not powershift 3rd gear :-(.
This makes me unhappy - and I don't know that I can accept this solution. I
want a balanced combination that I can thrash - I've made all the sacrifices I
want to by not running slicks. I am truly deadwall frustrated.
I welcome *any* helpful suggestions.
Eric.
|
57.72 | Pilot bearing? | GOLF::WILSON | | Fri Jun 26 1992 09:15 | 9 |
| Since you're having recurrent and similar problems with two different
transmissions after so many trouble free miles, I'd look for externally
for the source of your problem.
I'd start by checking or maybe replacing the pilot bearing. A worn
one will allow the transmission input shaft to wobble and wreak havoc
with your gears and bearings.
Rick
|
57.73 | Only row it three times.... | WFOV12::KOEHLER | A 340cc. powered G-Cart=GCFH!!! | Fri Jun 26 1992 11:16 | 10 |
| Eric,
You could always go back to a Top Loader.... :-)
Actually I don't like to hear the results of wear and brakage on the
T-5. That's what I have for the Falcon. I will be hauling a little
less weight, so maybe it will live alittle longer. Slicks.....Who
ME??? With the four link it should hook up well, but for how long
who knows...
TMW.
|
57.74 | Update on Borg-Warner T-5.
| JOAT::GOEHL | I'm scratchin' the itch. | Tue Jul 07 1992 08:57 | 31 |
| RE: Rick I was thinking along these lines, and spent much time checking
external things - Bellhousing alignment, replace pilot bearing, replace release
bearing, have the driveshaft balanced, and check crankshaft endplay. The clutch
housing was out of alignment, with 0.012 face runout and 0.017 bore runout, but
I'm not sure how this problem shows itself in the real world. Everything else
was either good or perfect. I am pretty sure that the problem is that I have
surpassed the load limit of a perfectly setup T-5. I added 60 more HP; maybe
30 more lb. ft.; and a centrifugal assisted clutch.
I am going to take out the southside lift bars and install the stock lower
rear control arms with 1 or both bushings changed to urethane. I replaced them
because I was getting wheel hop at the track. The lift bars don't really have
bushings; just a 1/8" thick hard nylon sleeve wrapped around the metal mounting
pin. Having these solid mounts on the lower arms is said to cause driveline
wear. How much I don't know. Powershifting at redline with a centrifugally
assisted clutch, stiff sidewalled tires, and solid control arm bushings has
got to produce an extremely severe shock load.
Maybe I need to try wrinkle wall tires :-).
Regardless of failures and shockloads, and all the other words I use to describe
stuff I don't really understand, I'm heading up to Epping tomorrow night to
give my car a proper and thorough thrashing :-).
RE: TMW
I need the overdrive to turn reasonable rpm's on the highway. The toploader
is not yet an option. Actually, you're not the only one to suggest this; a
couple of machine shops have said the toploader is my only real alternative if
I want to bang gears. Oh well...
Eric
|
57.75 | He Rebuilt my Muncie | BARUBA::REARWIN | Reinheitsgebot | Fri Feb 12 1993 09:38 | 5 |
| I said I was going to post this a long time ago:
Steve Eaton
Performance Transmission Service
Shrewsbury 508-842-0672
|
57.76 | General Tranny Questions | CGOOA::RATHNOW | It compiles, therefore it works... | Tue Feb 16 1993 12:53 | 22 |
|
Hi,
I have a couple question about transmissions in general:
I've heard that manual transmissions cannot be used with engine that have a lot
of horse power, instead, automatic transmissions or shift kits must be used.
1. Is this true?
if TRUE
then
2. Why?
3. What does a shift kit do exactly?
endif
When reading descriptions of transmissions, I see the number C6, C4 or
C-something used. What do these mean?
Thank in advance,
Dave.
|
57.77 | Transition Transmission | BARUBA::REARWIN | Reinheitsgebot | Tue Feb 16 1993 15:11 | 16 |
| >1. Is this true?
It depends on the power and torque of the engine, the transmission design,
and condition of the transission. A borg and warner T5 might blow up in an
application where a Doug Nash Engineering 5 speed would work fine.
> 2. Why?
Because some guys build a new 450 horse engine, and put a 25 year old Saginaw
behind it.
> 3. What does a shift kit do exactly?
Better answered by someone else.
>When reading descriptions of transmissions, I see the number C6, C4 or
>C-something used. What do these mean?
It's a model number of a Ford automatic tranny.
Matt
|
57.78 | Take your choice | SANTEE::AUGENSTEIN | | Wed Feb 17 1993 08:56 | 105 |
| Both stick and automatic transmissions are available that can take really
beefy amounts of torque, and when you're discussing drivetrains, torque is
the issue you need to be concerned with. Horsepower is only important when
you're worried about high rpm clutch or torque convertor explosions. That is,
large amounts of horsepower are generated by making torque at high rpm, so
rpm becomes the issue instead of horsepower.
In high-torque combinations, though, automatic transmissions tend to be easier
on drivetrain components, and this is one of the reasons they've gotten popular
with hot rodders.
Think of it this way:
Your drivetrain, from the back of the crankshaft all the way to the drive
wheels, only "sees" the output of a single cylinder at a time, in the form
of a "pulse" of torque. These pulses can be very strong ones in the case of
a good-sized engine. With a clutch acting as the link between the engine and
the rest of the drivetrain, the torque pulses are transmitted directly,
resulting in some level of load on all parts. Note that the flywheel is in place
for stick cars as a "buffer", in that it resists speeding up or slowing down,
thus tending to smooth the torque pulses a bit. It's also a terrific place to
hang a clutch :-). An automatic trans has a torque convertor in place of the
clutch, which attaches to a "flexplate", instead of the flywheel. A flexplate
performs the same functions as a flywheel (convenient place to hang a torque
convertor, convenient place to hang a starter motor, torque-pulse smoothing),
except that it's typically lighter than a flywheel. A torque convertor uses two
sets of paddles submerged in oil to transmit torque, and there is no direct
mechanical hookup between them. One set of paddles is driven by the engine, and
these paddles tend to get the oil rotating in unison with their rotation. The
other set of paddles gets coerced into moving because the oil is banging into
them, and those paddles are directly attached to the input shaft of the
transmission. As an aside, you can see that a flexplate can be lighter than a
flywheel, since the torque convertor itself has mass that will resist speeding
up or slowing down, and since there is no direct mechanical connnection between
the paddle sets, so the *oil* acts as a buffer of torque pulses.
As yet another aside :-), what I've actually described as a torque convertor is
really a fluid coupling. A torque convertor multiplies torque at stall by
virtue of one or more "stator wheels", placed between the two sets of paddles,
which redirect the flow of oil striking the driven paddles, thus providing
more efficient flow of torque, with less oil turbulence and cavitation.
Regardless of whether it's a fluid coupling or a torque convertor, the fluid
connection effectively acts as a shock absorber, so, for any given level of
torque production, a drivetrain is likely to live longer with an automatic than
with a stick.
When you're talking a dynamic situation, such as a drag race, an automatic will
also tend to be kinder to drivetrain parts than a stick, because you can't just
rev 'er up and drop the clutch, which tends to generate some really world-class
shock loads. Likewise, down track, an automatic is by definition power shifted,
but, unlike a stick, where power is interrupted by clutch disengagement while
the engine continues to rev, then reapplied with a bang as the clutch is
engaged and the engine is dragged back down to car speed, an automatic actually
begins to disengage its internal clutches in one gear while it is applying
clutches in the next gear, so power application is more continuous, and there is
less unloading and subsequent loading of the drivetrain, with less attendant
shock loads.
The bottom line: Automatics win the drivetrain longevity wars, everything else
being equal.
They may also win the *engine* longevity wars, since a missed shift under power
can blow an engine, and automatics are more trustworthy in this regard than
humans - at least *this* human :-).
Another reason why automatics are popular is that, in bracket racing, they tend
to be more consistent than sticks, and consistency is the key to winning in
bracket racing, as opposed to sheer speed.
Lastly, in a relatively small number of cases cases, automatics can be faster
than sticks, largely because, in traction limited situations, the smoother power
delivery may make for quicker launches.
Having said that, however, sticks *are* quicker than automatics, everything else
being equal and given reasonable driver skill, for a couple of reasons. First,
automatics take more engine power to run because they require internal oil
pressure to function, and the internal oil pump saps power to develop that
pressure. Second, they don't operate as efficiently in transmitting power as a
stick does, because of slippage in the torque convertor, which turns into heat.
Power is power, so that which ends up as heat is not going into the drive wheels
as *kinetic* energy. Third, sticks tend to have more gear ratios than automatics,
so rpm drop between gears is typically greater with an automatic. Even with a
like number of gears, automatics may have more rpm drop between each gear. An
example would be matching a 4-speed Muncie, top-loader, or some such against
a late model 700R4 or AOD. The 4-speed sticks have a 1 to 1 fourth, while the
autos use an *overdrive* fourth, so the ratio spread between first and fourth
is greater with the automatic than with the stick. Result: More rpm drop
between gears.
RPM drop is a no-no, in the sense that horsepower drops as rpm drops, and
horsepower is a convenient shorthand way to describe the available
belt-in-the-back at any given car speed. Less rpm drop between gears translates
into better ETs and trap speeds with any given power-to-weight ratio.
Re: Shift kits. These are modifications to autos that speed up the process of
simultaneous clutch engagement and disengagement, thus speeding up shifts, and
limiting heat production and wear caused by internal clutch slippage during the
shift process. Any automatic is likely to live longer under duress with a
well designed shift kit. A bonus is that the car will likely be quicker and more
consistent in a race.
Whew! Got carried away, there :-).
Bruce
|
57.79 | How about this one? | ESKIMO::MANUELE | | Wed Feb 17 1993 13:47 | 4 |
| Great explanation, Bruce.
Now can anyone describe how the new "lock-up torque converters" work?
John M.
|
57.80 | Simple | SANTEE::AUGENSTEIN | | Wed Feb 17 1993 15:06 | 18 |
| They use a clutch, somewhere in the general vicinity :-).
Really.
It'a a small clutch, because it's typically engaged only under low-torque cruise
conditions (plus you never need to slip it), and it's electrically/hydraulically
activated. More often than not, it's somewhere between the engine and torque
convertor driven element, and it drives the power straight through, thus
eliminating the torque convertor function entirely.
On Ford AODs, I believe it's behind the torque convertor, in the front of the
trans, and they transmit power through a double (shaft within a hollow shaft)
input shaft arrangement, which unfortunately crunches when you toss a lot of
torque through it, unless you get one machined out of unobtanium, or some such.
Bruce
PS - john K., tell us more if you're around.......
|
57.81 | One more question | CGOOA::RATHNOW | It compiles, therefore it works... | Thu Feb 18 1993 10:26 | 7 |
|
Thanks for the indepth explanation.
One more question: What does "Top-Loader" mean.
Dave
|
57.82 | | SANTEE::AUGENSTEIN | | Thu Feb 18 1993 14:06 | 7 |
| It's a type of Ford 4-speed gearbox from the sixties and early seventies. The
700R4 is a late GM 4-speed automatic (3-speed plus overdrive 4th), and the AOD
is a late Ford 4-speed auto with OD 4th, similar to the GM box, but with closer
ratios - meaning it's a dog off the line but then has less rpm drop between
shifts than the 700R4.
Bruce
|
57.83 | It's where you load the gears in from.. | NWTIMA::ELLISONRA | | Fri Feb 19 1993 13:11 | 5 |
| A Toploader has it's access panel on TOP. Not on the side
where the shift forks make it tough to remove.
Incredibly strong!
re
|
57.84 | Changing the shiftpoints of a TH-350? | TINCUP::MFORBES | It's NOT your father's Chevy Vega | Wed Apr 21 1993 08:14 | 11 |
| Has anyone ever tried to change the shift points on their TH-350? I think that
it is a function of the governor.
Currently with my foot planted firmly on the floor the tranny (in Drive) shifts
at 5000 and I would like to change that to something like 6000 rpm.
B&M, or someone, makes a kit with governor springs and weights but, I have never
messed with any of this type of work. Have any of you?
Thanks,
Mark
|
57.85 | Bob the tranny guy... | CXCAD::FRASER | | Wed Apr 21 1993 09:38 | 3 |
| Talk to Bob Lynch over a Champion Auto...
Brian...
|
57.86 | Kits are cheap and easy | MKOTS3::BEAUDET_T | Tom Beaudet | Mon Apr 26 1993 08:37 | 13 |
| I did it to mine...basically you try differtent combinations
of springs and weights in the gov...it's a bit of a pain because you have to
keep trying combinations 'till you get what you want.
You can control the top RPM point for both 2nd and 3rd.
Mine shifts into 2nd at 5200 and 3rd at 5000 - if I have some time I'll
change it up a couple of hundered some day.
It's really great at the drags...just put it in DRIVE and nail the
loud pedal and watch the world go by!
/tb/
|
57.87 | Borg-Warner T-5 weight. | JOAT::GOEHL | | Wed May 12 1993 12:42 | 5 |
| For all like-minded technoids that need to know; the Borg-Warner T-5 manual
transmission weighs 75 lbs.. I weighed my transmission, from a 1988 Mustang GT,
but I would expect that the T-5 used in various Chevy V8's weighs the same.
Eric
|
57.88 | Torque converter stall speed and engine torque question | EVMS::YAHWHO::PETROVIC | Looking for a simpler place & time... | Mon Jul 19 1993 09:11 | 19 |
| Is it safe to generally assume that if a torque converter stall speed is, say,
1700 RPM (stock) as listed in the manual and actually reads something like
2000 RPM, the engine is producing more torque than what the stock engine/tranny
combination is rated at?
I ask because this scenario is exactly what's happening with my car. I added
a few goodies and the most change occurred with a cam change, which I expected.
I'd like to know if there's a general mathematical rule that will approximate
the torque output of an engine given the difference in the stall speeds before
and after modifications. For example, X ft. lbs/100 RPM. Is the resistance
the converter exerts a linear function? If not, at what point does it become
non-linear?
I realize that this will be imprecise, but a ballpark figure is good enough.
Chris
(Cross posted in CARBUFFS, note 291.114, Ford Automatic Transmissions topic)
|
57.89 | Call the folks who know | SANTEE::AUGENSTEIN | | Mon Jul 19 1993 11:12 | 7 |
| A call to the tech line of any of the aftermarket torque convertor folks (TCI,
Art Carr, B & M, etc.) ought to give you as good a source of information as you
can get.
Let us know.
Bruce
|
57.90 | Manual Transmission Oil Additives | CUJO::BROWN | Dave Brown | Fri Dec 10 1993 20:16 | 10 |
|
What's everyone's favorite manual transmission oil additive? I've
heard of a few, namely Slick-50 and Hilton Hyper-Lube but have also
heard of others that transmission repair shops/personnel recommend but
I haven't heard of any names. There's a few mysterious additives that
the guys who push them say "If you put some of this stuff in, your
gearbox will last for ever!"
Comments?
|
57.91 | Not as an additive,............ | SANTEE::AUGENSTEIN | | Mon Dec 13 1993 06:54 | 3 |
| ...........but I like Red Line products, in whatever flavor. MTL, 75W-90NS, etc.
Bruce
|
57.92 | Total in-vehicle ATF change | CUJO::BROWN | Dave Brown | Tue Jun 07 1994 11:08 | 24 |
|
I've got a TH700-R4 transmission that I'm going to be changing the
ATF in. As we all knwo, simply dropping the pan only gets rid of about
half of the ATF, the other half is in the torque converter and in other
'inaccesible' parts of the transmission. The problem is how do you
change ALL of the ATF.
I've heard it said that one way this can be done is to do the
normal pan-drop ATF change first. Then disconnect the return line from
the ATF cooler (on the radiator) to the transmission, start the engine
and let the ATF drain out of the disconnected tube until you start
getting new ATF out the tube. Then turn the engine off and top off the
transmission. This leads me to have some questions:
1) Is this an 'approved' way of getting rid of all your old ATF?
Has anyone done this? Is there anything you need to watch out
for?
2) Which of the two lines connecting to the transmission is the
return line - the upper or the lower one?
Thanks!
Dave
|
57.93 | It still makes a BIG mess on the floor! | NWTIMA::BERRYDO | When the green flag drops... | Thu Jun 09 1994 09:39 | 18 |
|
Dave,
While this method might exchange some fluid in the trans cooling
system, most of the inaccessable fluid is in the converter. The only
way to really flush the converter is outside the car on a special
machine to flush converters. I have had my race converter flushed after
major transmission failures to remove any metal that might be left.
If the transmission in the vehicle is in good condition, then the
dilution of the old and new fluids would not really be a problem. You
might consider changing the fluid again after a 1000 or so miles to
really get as much new fluid in as possible.
Have you considered synthetic ATF?
Don B
|
57.94 | 'cept the lock-up ones | CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Thu Jun 09 1994 11:17 | 5 |
| You can always switch over to a MoPar trans. Their converters have drain
plugs in them. :-)
|
57.95 | | CUJO::BROWN | Dave Brown | Fri Jun 10 1994 12:20 | 22 |
|
Re: 93
Yea, I've considered synthetic ATF but the problem still is how to get
all of the non-synthetic (and dirty) ATF out so you don't defeat the
(expensive) synthetic ATF too badly. I was considering using Kendall or
Castrol ATF. More affordible than synthetic and good enough...
Re: 94
Drain plug kits are available for GM transmissions but you still have
the problem of how to get all the ATF out plus you'd have the
additional problem of not being able to change the filter unless you
did pull the pan...
I guess the ATF doesn't get pumped through the torque converter... or
does it? If id did, my method of pulling the cooling return line on the
transmission and draining out the ATF until new ATF came out may work.
Anyone know which is the pressure line and which is the return line? I
can't find it anywhere in any of my manuals.
Dave
|
57.96 | The hottest one ain't the return line... :-) | USHS01::HARDMAN | Massive Action = Massive Results | Fri Jun 10 1994 20:49 | 11 |
| Dave, to find the return line, start the engine cold and feel the
lines. The one that gets hot first (in a couple of minutes usually) is
the feed line. The other is the return line. :-)
If things are hooked right, the one going to the bottom of the cooling
unit should be the pressure side and the upper one the return side.
This makes sure that the cooler stays full of fluid for maximum heat
transfer.
Harry
|
57.97 | do it the easy way.... | CSC32::J_KALINOWSKI | Forget NAM?....NEVER! | Mon Jun 13 1994 20:05 | 17 |
|
Do the converter drain the way its done at transmission shops.....
(at ours, anyway) Remove the old 700's filter, and cut off the pickup
tube from the old filter body. Then you get a new or extremly clean
2 gallon pail and solder a .5" nipple at the bottom side of the pail.
Sit the pail on the hood and connect the bucket to the old filter neck
that you shoved back into the valve body. Fill the bucket with 5 new
quarts of atf and start the engine......your converter is now completly
flushed of its old oil. At out shop we have adapters made for every
automatic on the planet. Making one for a 200R4 or 700R4 just requires
your old filter. OOps! don't use heater hose that was ever used for
anything else. When you build this contraption, get a piece of brand
new half inch heater hose to connect the bucket to the valve body.
5 new quarts of oil is actually overkill as this will actually flush
the converter twice. But what the hell.....atf is cheap.
-john
|
57.98 | '47 Nova Transmission problem | CGOOA::RATHNOW | Eat right, stay fit, die anyway... | Tue Jun 28 1994 23:03 | 18 |
|
hi
I have a 1974 Nova with a trany that is give me some problems. The old
girl has decided that reverse and third gear are no longer required for
day to day operation.
I can shift into Drive with no problems but when I get up to speed it
will not go into third. When I shift into Reverse, the car will move
backward VERY slowly (about a snails pace). If I give gas it will move
a bit faster, but just barely. If I am going down a hill and shift into
"2" it will drop down.
Anyone know what the problem might be? I will most likely have to take
this in to get fixed but I would like some idea of what it might be before.
Thanks
Dave.
|
57.99 | cheap and free, if not likely | CXDOCS::HELMREICH | Steve | Wed Jun 29 1994 09:23 | 12 |
|
A friend of mine had a '73 Omega (Novaclone) and had trouble getting it to
upshift. The kickdown cable was rusty to the point where it was holding the
transmission in too low a gear all the time.
It's a longshot, but WD-40 beats any trip to the transmission shop. I doubt
this cable would be affecting the reverse gear situation, though.
Just check the simple stuff first.
steve
|
57.100 | Broke the linkage, among other things. | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Wed Jun 29 1994 13:27 | 2 |
| I had a '74 Apollo (Novaclone) and when I got stuffed into the wall
at Riverside Park Speedway the whole transmission stopped working.
|
57.101 | The last trans I lost, the guy poured the gears out of it. | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Wed Jun 29 1994 13:32 | 13 |
| Seriously, I don't think it's the linkage, since he's loosing reverse
also. It sounds like it's positivly shifting into the proper gear
(confirmed by going in reverse) so it's not a cabling issue. The
problem sounds like the clutches in R and 3rd are shot. How does the
trans fluid look? Have you checked it? Does it look like somethings
burnt up inside?
A test drive at the trans shop can't cost that much, if anything.
They'd be able to confirm the trannys on the way out, or give you
an idea of what you need to fix it (or how much it'll cost for them
to fix).
MadMike
|
57.102 | Do it your self and save! | NWTIMA::BERRYDO | When the green flag drops... | Wed Jun 29 1994 19:41 | 8 |
|
The high gear clutch pack is smoked. It is used is both 3rd and
reverse. If you pull the trans out and remove the pump (with a slide
hammer) the high gear pack is the first one that you remove. For about
$40 in parts you can fix it yourself.
Don
|
57.103 | DNE 4+1 info needed | HOTLNE::MALESKY | | Mon Feb 20 1995 12:59 | 9 |
| I am in need of an exploded view drawing and parts list for an older
Doug Nash 4+1 race version 5 speed transmission. Richmond Gear has
taken over DNE and only have literature for 4+1's manufactured after
mine which I believe is early 1970's. Anyone have literature or know
anyone who may that I can obtain a copy from?
Thanks,
John
|
57.104 | FoMoCo C4 question | EVMS::YAHWHO::PETROVIC | Looking for a simpler place & time... | Wed Mar 29 1995 08:39 | 20 |
| Gentlemen,
I've got a '71 C4 with B&M shift kit that appears to be stuck. The car
was garaged all winter, started monthly and pulled out then back into the bay.
Only 1st and reverse were excercized, although I did run the shifter throughout
the entire range each time.
This past weekend, I took the thing out and onto the street, where I
discovered it seemed to be stuck in 1st. Pulling out of the bay, it was in 1,
then when on the street, I manually shifted it to 2, then to D, all at speeds
below 25mph. When going from 1-2, it shifted smartly, however when going from
2-D, it seemed to return to 1st.
The shift kit was installed three years ago, the fluid changed once
since then, so it's not a faulty installation. Is it conceivable that the
kickdown valve/plunger is stuck in the valve body? Wouldn't this condition
preclude manual shifting entirely? The kickdown linkage moves freely, without
binding of any sort. Is there a shifting sequence I can try to free the valve
or must I resign myself to the fact that I have to pull the valve body?
Chris
|
57.105 | vaccuum ?? | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Tue Apr 04 1995 10:21 | 8 |
| most automatic transmissions shift based on vaccuum.
if the vaccuum line is disconnected you will be able to shift manually
ok but it wont shift automatically in drive.
Brian V
|