7/10/2015 Fixed my camera.
THE SMOKING GUN- The worst Transmission shop ever, PM me if you want the name of the place to stay away from.
Time to take apart the blown transmission and see what happened.
So i put the blown trans on the bench.
first things first look at the outside.
Turns out this transmission was from a 1974 Ford Station wagon Marquis with a column shift.
this transmission leaked from day one it came back from the transmission shop. Note i painted the case on the transmission when i got it back from the trans shop to make it look nicer, i decided to fake a steel tail shaft paint job on it.
I have not even opened it yet and i can already see MASSIVE grooves in the pump bushings. the input shaft was ok
more leaks
the pan: the pan was pretty clean there was some clutch material but no metal.
Problem #1 The transmission is using a deep pan and a stock shallow filter was on the valve body, not a huge red flag since the pan is filled to the dip stick mark, but could be a suction problem for fluid getting into the pump and going around the transmission.
Problem #2, the end play is in la la land way over .50"
Problem #3 as i went through the transmission all the thrust washers were HEAVILY worn and there were gouges in the drums and mating surfaces.
crap "B" lever and "N" servo bottom of the line for performace.
starting to take it apart
Pull the 2nd gear band
Problem #4, the band is obviously burned unevenly, i checked the drum surface and it was OK, no grooving. however when i flexed the band the clutch material started to fall off. usually you see that on really old bands that have not been changed, Possible transmission place not changing out the band for a new one.
more coming apart
By this point I'm not seeing the Smoking Gun on what caused the transmission to lock up, i am seeing heavy wear and scoring, lots of burnt up clutch sludge.
major problem #5 starts to show its head
This picture shows the Low-reverse piston was incorrectly installed the check valve should be installed facing the pan here the piston is installed about 180 degrees out.
Now the real fun starts.
i pulled the Low-Reverse piston and discovered 5 springs were missing.
oh they were there before the transmission place messed with it. you could see the impression in the rust of where they used to be.
the moron that assembled this transmission just lost 5 of the springs and figured he didn't care, he didn't even out the missing springs or anything just left an entire area of missing springs causing uneven piston engagement.
left me saying ARE YOU KIDDING ME!?
moving on.
Problem #6
the trust washer under the parking brake drum was not stamped down correctly.
i took apart the speed governor and it was gummed up with clutch sludge from the clutch failure.
At this point i started to take apart the drums.
forward drum looked ok, again very worn bushings etc.
next the Direct Drum or called the Rev-High drum.
And BLAMO the Bullet that killed the transmission
Those 3 pictures are of a fused clutch band and 2 steel bands, this is what locked up my 1st gear and my 3rd gear.
However it was slipping so what caused it, the heat needed to fuse everything together?
thus i looked into the direct drum piston.
Major problem #7
it is impossible to see in the photo but half of the correct number of springs are missing.
basically you have 3 ways to install the springs early c-6s use all the springs and later ones use less springs in strategic places
My transmission has 6 randomly placed springs for the piston.
i stopped at this point....
one last thing was the trans placed mixed different manufacturers of clutches in the transmission there was wagner in one, raybestos in the other and unknown in the direct drum because it all burnt up. normally you get a kit and all the clutches come in the kit, they must of grabbed whatever they had on the shelf to put mine together and charge me lots of money.
if you want to see the other epic failure of this transmission place i used go here:
http://www.7173mustangs.com/thread-how-to-rebuild-a-ford-9-inch
http://www.7173mustangs.com/thread-how-to-rebuild-a-ford-9-inch-part-2
to repair this transmission would cost me around 350$ in materials plus a couple days of me wrenching on it.
it needs new bushings which would raise the cost of repair as well.
in this case i would trash out much of the internals and swap over parts from another transmission.
it can be fixed but at this point i don't see a need for it.
interesting to note;
this 74 transmission has 3 clutches in the forward drum and 3 clutches in the direct drum and 4 clutches in the body.
making it a 3,3,4 transmission
I modified my 73 transmission to use 4 clutches for the direct and forward making my replacement transmission much stronger as a 4,4,4 transmission.
a modern built up C6 can be a 6,6,8 for comparison.
So now the failure has been pinpointed. there were more then a few guns pointed at this transmission one bullet had the fatal shot.
I will be hanging the fused clutches and steels on my wall as a trophy
----- One more thing to report ----
In all this i changed from DOT 5 to DOT 3 brake fluid. I did this because DOT 5 was causing leaks all over the place.
well switched to DOT 3 and my leaks have all stopped. food for thought.