- Joined
- Jul 19, 2011
- Messages
- 4,829
- Reaction score
- 22
- Location
- Pittsburgh, PA
- My Car
- 1973 Mach 1 Q code 4 speed
1973 Chevelle 454 SS
2005 Magnum RT
2008 Colorado
TheJ is making wooden custom shift knobs for our toploaders. You may want to PM him.
So what was your solution to the starter/flywheel ring gear problem? I am currently doing the exact same swap and am at the point of buying a mini starter and mocking things up. I was thinking of fabbing up a spacer for the starter if a suitable one cannot be found. Or possibly moving the ring gear to the clutch side of the flywheel. What did you end up doing?Well it's been a long time since the last update. There have been a couple of snags in getting the car going. First is finding the correct starter. The pocket in the V-6 bell housing is offset for a gear reduction starter. The starter that matches the bellhousing has a gear that will work well for an automatic or later model flywheel where the ring gear is on the clutch side of the flywheel. The ring gear on a '73 flywheel is on the engine side which causes the starter gear to be in constant mesh, not good for the starter. An old style bendix starter will not fit the bellhousing. The answer is a specialty gear reduction starter for the early manual transmission. I'll find out this weekend how it works. Second is the driveshaft. I sold the C-6 driveshaft to a member who needed it since it was too short anyway. The driveshaft needs to be 49" with my combination. I picked up a Fox body driveshaft from a local car club member (freebie, my favorite price). The issue is the fox shavt uses a 1330 u-joint and the rear yoke uses a 1310 joint. Heres the rub the 9" also uses 1-1/8" diameter caps instead of conventional 1-1/16" caps. I found a u-joint kit by Ford racing @ Summit which is a 1310/1330 combination joint with extra 1-1/8" caps. So all that stands between me and shifting my own gears is installing the starter, bypassing the wiring connector for the neutral safety switch, bypassing the seat belt warning connection to the NSS and having the d-shaft lengthened (install new tube). It's close!!! I hope to have the car running this weekend and hopefully the d-shaft built and installed next week (3-5 days for the shop). I hope to get a video of the first drive.
Awesome. I would have bought the wrong starter for sure. Thanks! You have been driving it for a little while now, any other little gremlins show up?Well I found 2 issues, the late model starter would not work with my flywheel and the earlier model starter had too big a "register" ring for the V-6 block plate. My solution was an early 90's F150 manual transmission starter. It is PMGR (mini) starter with a large register ring. I took a 90* air grinder with a flap wheel and opened up the hole until the starter fit, it's about 1/16" larger than the hole.
My other issue was the starter not dis-engaging. Once a PMGR starter starts spinning it self energizes and returns slowly. The fix for this was to run the main power cable from the battery cable from the battery side of the original solenoid to the large connection on the starter. Then a 10 gauge wire from the output side of the original starter solenoid to the switch terminal of the new starter solenoid. That worked flawlessly and stopped the starter from dragging. I will not describe the way I wired it before as I don't want to muddy the issue.
hello i have a question what is the engine you have? because i've got a t5 but i dont know if it gonna work with my 351 C thanks for your answerLike many things... it has been started but not completed.
I have a mild 351c 2V heads and a Performer intake with a 650ish Holley. The T-5 is plenty strong for normal use. They break due to shock loads.hello i have a question what is the engine you have? because i've got a t5 but i dont know if it gonna work with my 351 C thanks for your answer
What size is your clutch disc/kit? I’m doing the same swap in my 73. Modern Driveline suggests a 10.4” metric (mixed metaphor) clutch kit. I’ve read that any clutch from a mid 80‘s 5.0l fox body will work. But they have varying sizes, from 10” -11”. What brand & size did you use?Well... it's been 9 years and about 50k miles on this swap. I decided to pull the engine and trans to re-seal the engine and do some other work. I looked at the clutch and it looks pretty good for it's age.
I'm going to add some photos of things I didn't document very well in this thread over the winter. There are tons of things to clean up and refresh.
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I used a 90's V6 bell housing that takes an 11" clutch and 164T flywheel... why the V6 uses an 11" and a V8 uses a 10.5 you'd need to ask the engineers. I used a rebuilder grade flywheel, disc and diaprhagm pressure plate kit, Rhinopack I think was the brand. I went with the 11" so I could use OE replacement stuff for the Cleveland. The Fox body throw out bearing is the only "different" part.What size is your clutch disc/kit? I’m doing the same swap in my 73. Modern Driveline suggests a 10.4” metric (mixed metaphor) clutch kit. I’ve read that any clutch from a mid 80‘s 5.0l fox body will work. But they have varying sizes, from 10” -11”. What brand & size did you use?
Thanks in advance for any help. Ripper
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