So this is the angle of an org Ford Hurst.
Okay. It is a case of "well, it looks like it might fit, so I guess it will be work", rather than being an exact reproduction of the original for a specific application. This happen way too often with reproduction stuff. It get listed as 67-73 but in reality it is no where near correct for our years. It really screws us up when ordering online and when we can't actually see the part in question. Why reputable companies do this is beyond me, makes no sense and just causes frustration and is bad business.You are right, it is an aftermarket shifter, supposingly for 71-73. You then confirm me what i was thinking, the aftermarket mounting kit put the shifter at the wrong position vs the original.
Sorry, but have you actually tried to use one on a Mustang? When I got that same item, even IF I'd know at the time I needed to buy the linkage kit, which I was not informed about by Summit Racing, there is no way in hell it was going to fit right in the Mustang. The offset is totally wrong for the floor consul let alone the angle of the stick was wrong as well and it is far longer than the factory Hurst stick. It might fit a truck, but not a Mustang. I guess though some people just don't care and good enough is good enough. Hmmm!That shifter will work fine if you use the right mounting kit, but as was stated the OEM shifter/ bracket/ linkage is totally different than the aftermarket Hurst Competition Plus. The aftmarket shifter is going to come through the floor at a different angle and is going to look a little different but it should work fine.
I think it boils down to personal preference and how difficult it is to find the OEM parts if trying to run the Ford setup. The aftermarket shifter is a fine piece and fits most Fords of the mid sixties, it just uses model specific mounting kits...
First off, I'm sorry if I came on a bit strong on you. It was not my intention to offend anyone.I haven't put one in a 71-73, but had one in a 69 Cougar which isn't too different.
You are correct that the stick is longer and doesn't sit at the same angle as the OEM shifter. I assume that this is due to Hurst spec-ing one shifter assembly (with a welded on stick!) for the Ford intermediates.
Agreed, I suppose in a pinch, something is better than nothing. I guess a competent welder could cut the stick off, shorten it or re-bend it and make it look some what better, but the chrome would mostly be shot at least at the bottom. Downside of that is the heat could easily damage the mechanism and then you're back to square one.No worries.
I completely agree with you- the aftermarket CP shifter isn't optimal for the 71-73; having driven a couple of 71 4-speed cars with the OEM setup the stock shifter just feels and looks 'right,' the aftermarket one looks and feels awkward.
However, if you don't have all of the OEM parts (as was mentioned none of the aftermarket linkage will work with the OEM shifter/ bracket) or they are in bad shape, I think you can still buy the aftermarket shifter and installation kit, and it will work (maybe need to 'massage' the floor opening a little as the stick comes out close to the driver's side of the opening) to get one banging gears....
I got a 4 speed toploader RUG AV1, with a hurst competion plus on a mach 1 1973 with a 351C.
I have installed the ford mounting bracket D1ZA-7E046-BA, and the hurst braket #3176.
The fit is different, the shifter angle is different.
Why are they different ?
Which one is the right fit ???
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