Jan 29th.
Parts List for new transmission
I ordered all my parts the other day and it turns out the
transmission is backordered for about two weeks but should be here on Jan.
30th. if everything goes well. Hurst Driveline has a great program which
makes it easy to find the kit that works best for you. They sell three
different ones which are; basic, deluxe and elite kits. I went with
the elite kit because it had almost everything I needed which includes
the following parts:
- Tremec 5 speed trans with your choice of gear ratio
- Speedometer cable for mechanical setups or wiring for electric
setups
- Reverse light switch
- Transmission mount (Energy Suspension)
- Needle roller pilot bearing
- Hardware kit (Grade 8 bolts)
- Driveshaft (Inland Empire Driveline)
- Hydraulic release bearing (RAM)
- Shifter knob (Hurst)
- Aluminum bellhousing
- Flywheel (Cast)
- Heavy duty clutch (supports up to 425 hp)
- Detailed instructions
Now you have your choice of optional components that you can add if
you'd like which is something I did. First upgrade was the driveshaft.
The one that comes with the kit is a 3" steel one but I upgraded to a 3
1/2" aluminum unit. Second upgrade was the aluminum bellhousing. I upgraded
to a steel scatter shield made by
Quicktime. This is something that I
wouldn't live without because if your clutch or worse yet a flywheel
comes apart, more then likely it's going right through that aluminum
piece and through the floor of the car. The third upgrade was the
clutch. I upgraded to a twin disc unit made by
McLeod. The fourth upgrade
was the flywheel. The flywheel they provide is cast steel which is
something I don't want either and after asking them if they could get the one I
wanted they told me no. But the good news is they would credit me back
for the cost of the original flywheel. Now how great is that? Pretty
cool people to do business with I'll have to say. Now I wait...........
While I've been waiting for all those parts to arrive I've been
trying to keep busy with other tasks. What I needed to do next is remove all the wiring for
controlling the old transmission and I've been dreading this because of how
I built the car. Let me explain... when you build a racecar you make it
easy to work on but when you build a street rod you make it as clean as
possible. Here is what I mean about the term 'clean as possible'. One
thing that comes to mind is
hiding fasteners so you're not able to see how something is attached or
in this case hiding most of the wiring so you don't see any clusters of
wires. But when
you do hide something, it can make it very difficult to work on.
I had to remove the center console and drivers side kick panel to get
at most of the wiring and after they were out of the way, this is what
it looked like. I had forgotten how many wires were under the
console...wow! Removing the computer was a snap because there were only
two plugs that screwed into it (one of them is visible at the bottom
left). Now getting to all that wiring that went to those plugs was going
to be a different story because some of them ran all the way across the
underside of the dash. That's not so bad but when they are all inside
that purple wire wrap, along with lots of clamps holding them in place
and with some of those clamps very hard to get at, it's a different
story. After laying on my back in all sorts of weird positions getting
at all those wires, I got them all disconnected and now they're ready to
pass through the floor. Something else that has been bugging me for
awhile now is the gap in the carpet next to the center console. Over the
past few years this gap has been getting larger because my foot slides
around right there while I work the throttle but the only way to fix it
properly would be to remove the center console. So again I took this
opportunity while nothing was in the way and fixed it. All I had to do
was remove the old carpet tape and replace it with some new stuff but
this time I made the length of the tape longer for each piece. And I
added a couple more just for good measure so I hope that does the trick.
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