I would be more concerned with the stress on the rubber cushions than the trans itself. The small BW six trannies were aluminum and fared well with the TT. The tailshaft housing is no stronger than the open drive models. In fact, they are exactly the same except for the flange as far as I can tell. Could be a different alloy or a little thicker casting, but I don't think so. The TT cars have arms with thin rubber bushings on the trans crossmember to limit fore and aft movement, taking some strain off the cushions. The enine and trans mount cushions still wear out faster on a TT car though. The double U-joint CV is called a "Double Cardan" CV joint. 4x4 trucks use them for high angle lifts. The centering mechanism is different enough from the old style (I haven't taken one apart -- might just be different sized pin/springs, might be totally different design) that the parts won't interchange. But a driveshaft shop that caters to 4x4 customers can install one of these in place of the old one easy enough. A standard T-10 yoke will fit one of the new style joints, and that's what all the cast iron BW trannys used. The old style joint has a yoke that won't work with a standard driveshaft. The u-joints are standard, but the yokes on that thing are vastly different. ----------------------------------------------- On August 22, 2006 andrew hay wrote: > " From: <francis.swygert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > " > " I, and a few others, have seriously considered some kind of adapter or > " bracket to allow use of a torque tube with a newer trans. You'd think it > " would be simple enough, but the rear axle actually pushes the tube to > " make the car move. A bracket on the crossmember sounds good, but the > " engine is on rubber mounts and you can't have movement between the TT > " and engine. AMCs solution was to rubber mount the trans crossmember as > " well, but there is still semi-rigid link between the engine and TT. So > " the TT has to be mounted to the trans itself. This puts more stress on > " the engine and trans mount, and newer ones weren't designed for fore and > " aft stresses. So it really isn't practical. > > i'll bet iron cased trannies like the ford toploader would hold up > fine, but afaik all the 5sp [and 6sp] have aluminum cases. even the > toploader went aluminum about '80. > > " The only problem with V-8 shafts is the CV joint on 63-66 models. Those > " are the only years that joint was used, and it was only used by one > " other company -- Lincoln. The joint nor repair parts are no longer made. > > i have to comment here. i have a lincoln ['67], and their cv joint is > just two u-joints back-to-back. the joints themselves are common and > available, but the coupler - which includes centering springs - is the > missing piece. i had to score a '68 driveshaft from a junkyard when > my cv couplers went bad. > ________________________________________________________________________ > Andrew Hay the genius nature > internet rambler is to see what all have seen > adh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and think what none thought ============================================================= Posted by wixList Archiver -- http://www.amxfiles.com/wixlist _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com