Send AMC-List mailing list submissions to amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to amc-list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx You can reach the person managing the list at amc-list-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxx When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of AMC-List digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Re: torqu tube Q??? (farna@xxxxxxx) 2. Re: you two enjoy this (Eddie Stakes) 3. torqu tube Q??? (johnny kazek) 4. Re: AMC drivers (Tom Jennings) 5. AMC forum? (Andy&Tonja&Phoebe Ray) 6. Torqu tube Q??? (J. Johnson) 7. Motor For Sale - MI (Richard Estermyer) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2006 02:02:31 +0000 From: farna@xxxxxxx Subject: Re: [AMC-List] torqu tube Q??? To: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx Cc: imfatdad@xxxxxxxxx Message-ID: <092220060202.9801.4513443700016A790000264921602806510E029D0E00@xxxxxxx> Not likely a u-joint, as noted. If it's a sheared hub there's an easy way to find out -- just take the hub caps off the rear and look at the end of the axle when someone tries to move the car. If the nut turns the hub is sheared. Sounds like something inside the axle, could be a pinion shaft as happened to Tom J. I always jacke the car up by the center of the axle with a floor jack, put jack stands under the body just in front of the tires, then take the tires off. That greatly reduces how high the rear of the car has to be. Take shocks and brake lines loose before dropping the axle, of course. The air springs were an option in 59 and 60 only. The air springs will come out with the low rate coils. The air line screws into the upper spring seat. The spring is connected to the axle by a stud, so the springs don't just lift out like the standard springs will. You can turn the whole spring and screw it off once weight is off the springs and there is about an inch of clearance above the spring. Otherwise you'll have to jack the body up a lot more to get the axle (with springs attached) out. The lower seat (on the axle) will come off either with the spring or after the spring is removed. The stud that holds the spring on the axle also holds the lower seat on. A 3/8" fine thread bolt holds the lower seat on a regular spring car. Similar air springs are still available from Goodyear if those are damaged. There is a height control valve attached to the rear axle that keeps the car level. If that's damaged it may be a problem to replace. It is rebuildable, though I doubt par! ts can be found now. Note that the Concord and Eagle had a leveling system in the 80s, but it was totally different. It used an electric compressor with no air tank and typical air shocks instead of air bags. The height switch was a simple normally open switch that tripped a relay when closed. The relay turned on the compressor which ran until the rear end came up enough to open the switch. The switch also controlled an air release solenoid, so it was a two contact switch. The air pump is designed to deliver 1 CFM of air at 150 psi at 50 mph cruising speed with a maximum output of 275 psi. The air tank is in the left fender well. It's 300 cubic inches. The entire system can be replaced by any air ride shop. If the compressor is bad I'd use an electric one -- that's why I gave the specs for the compressor. If you decide to do away with the air springs you MUST replace the coil springs with standard types. I'm pretty sure the upper and lower spring seats are the same, but the coils used with the air springs are very light and won't adequately support the car without the air springs in them. If any parts of the load leveling system are damaged Coil Spring Specialties (www.coilsprings.com) can make up a set of stock rate springs. Order them 15% stiffer than stock though, it will increase handling without sacrificing ride. Those old cars were made to run much lower speeds on much rougher roads than is typical today. You'll be impressed by the handl! ing wit h stiffer springs and radial tires! The new springs will be varaible rate, meaning they stiffen the more they are compressed. Most auto parts stores sell air "helper" or overload springs. These ARE NOT the same as the air springs in the 59-60 cars. Those bags won't support nearly as much weight, they are designed to increase the load by fitting inside the normal springs. A leveling system could be made with that type, a compressor, and level sensing switch (or a couple micro switches). -- Frank Swygert Publisher, "American Motors Cars" Magazine (AMC) For all AMC enthusiasts http://farna.home.att.net/AIM.html (free download available!) -------------- Original message ---------------------- Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2006 07:57:13 -0700 (PDT) From: J Johnson <imfatdad@xxxxxxxxx> Subject: [AMC-List] torqu tube Q??? I received the following inquiry from a guy on another message baord I frequent. I have never been into a torque tube, figured someone here has. I would like to know more about this as well.... he writes: I just got a 60 Rambler Deluxe Wagon i6 196 automatic, and I need to get the torque tube off to replace the u-joint towards the rear (transmission engages but car will not move, slight squeek sound can be heard back there, was told by previous owner that it's the u-joint) . I have a manual for the car and instructions say to raise the car in the back, then disconnect the suspension bars and emergency brake lines attached to the torque tube, then unbolt from rearend and you should be able to pull tube away to have access to pinions and u-joint. Anything I've read on the subject (including the manual) does not address the air springs that are also connected to the axle. I've spent some time underneath the car spraying bolts down with PB Blaster and preparing to tackle the job, I guess I'm having a hard time visualizing what's supposed to happen when I follow the instructions, particularly with those springs. I'm a relative newbie, confident with engine, brakes, etc., but this'd be my first time working on a drivetrain on a car. If any of this makes sense and you have any help or advice you could offer me, I'd greatly appreciate it! ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2006 19:27:01 -0500 From: "Eddie Stakes" <eddiestakes@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: [AMC-List] you two enjoy this To: "Mahoney, John" <jmahoney@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Tate, Randy" <Randall.Tate@xxxxxxxxx>, <tomj@xxxxxxx> Cc: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx Message-ID: <028001c6ddfc$9f999f20$e8f3b148@piageedc1iqa5q> Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1"; reply-type=original And as I write, there was just a interesting tidbit that I saw on the evening news on ABC, one of the rare times I watch the news. It was talking about the failure of the Ask Dr. Z series of commercials. A Chrysler spokesman said it 'was a huge success' while others including ad agencies, and car watchers, said it was a huge failure. No one could really relate to a guy they could not understand, much less didn't trust, even if whimsical, said one. Another said no one knew what the guy was trying to sell. I agree with that, and I guess whoever put together the report did too. Hard to believe Chrysler pissed away a whopping $100 million dollars on that crappy ad campaign, even if the CEO was the star. Hard to believe that is called a success when Chrysler is looking at a $1.2 BILLION loss in the 3rd 1/4: http://www.topix.net/content/ap/3231111279108044554415400180274230152360?threadid=AM423H9LKEAV2LRI Still even more ironic is the tidbit/snippet compared past CEO's who took to the tube in a effort to sell. Why was Orville Rickenbacher not there? But goofy Iaococca was. So was the fellow who sells Schick razors, saying he loved them so much he bought the company. But in a time......and age......where one thinks of CEO's being dragged off to jail (pick one: Enron, Worldcomm, ad nauseum) and see CEO's dripping $400 million "bonuses" like the Exxon/Mobil CEO recently; I don't think people, speaking for myself, connected with the Dr. Z. commercials. Every time I saw another commercial I thought of 1988 all over again and bulldozers plowing over huge piles of NOS aMC parts in landfills west of Houston and other places in the US. John didn't post the whole letter as it was long, and a reply of mine to a media fellow in California along with some suggestions for topics including doing a possible bio on Angela Dorian/Victoria Vetri for instance. And Pacers, the fellow had a Pacer and wants another. I told him to do a story on how many cars in 2006 suddenly are Pacerized and Gremlized. Toyota. Ford. A whole number of them are rolling aquariums and cut off butt ends. Same people who called AMC ugly in the 70s are now driving modern cars with AMC's stolen lines! Duh! I'm not sure what happened with the amcforum.com either, although some have asked me about it. I was not a member there. If it did bite it, it falls into the old category of AMC Magazine; AMCWC; AMC unity council; AMC council of clubs; amcforum.net; and a number of other things that have bit it AMC-wise. All similiar, all different. Maybe a lot of lost online AMCers will fill up with $1.99 gas (yup, it is $1.99 a gallon in several places here) and mosey over to this place and Bart's online place. I also had a interesting email today from Mark S who I think is a member here asking AMO head Darrly Salisbury about the possibility of a Survivor Class. I won't put my whole letter here, but it pointed out (I hope) some the judging styles, shows and what not, what to expect and hoppefully in the long run, there is room on the showfield for all AMC and Rambler vehicles, whether custom, stock, non stock, chopped, lowered, limoed, kemped, frenched, monster garagged, pimped, you name it. Anyhows, gott go, long day, keep the old red, white and blue flame burning. Eddie Stakes' Planet Houston AMX 713.464.8825 eddiestakes@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx www.planethoustonamx.com Email is currently HEAVY 5-12 day reply times, call if important ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mahoney, John" <jmahoney@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: "Eddie Stakes" <eddiestakes@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>; "Tate, Randy" <Randall.Tate@xxxxxxxxx>; <tomj@xxxxxxx> Cc: <amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Thursday, September 21, 2006 4:12 PM Subject: RE: you two enjoy this Date: Wednesday, September 20, 2006 04:35 PM From: Tom Jennings <tomj@xxxxxxx> On Wed, 20 Sep 2006, Mahoney, John wrote: > http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/1973-AMC-HORNETT-ONE-OWNER_W0QQitemZ320024818984Q QihZ011QQcategoryZ5357QQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem > > snip > > Maverick is almost same condition, and ugly color to boot still got $1200 more bidding and no dumbass questions: > > http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/1972-Ford-Maverick-Excellent-Condition_W0QQitemZ2 80024696326QQihZ018QQcategoryZ6057QQssPageNameZWDVWQQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem OK, I agree with you, that is embarrassing. What a bunch of lamebrain remarks on the Hornet. And I think they are an excellent pairing for comparison. ####################################################### For the record, Tom, you agree with -Eddie-, whose note (below) set me rambling, and, as my time for AMC nostalgia limits me to seeing just one list, Doc's 'script also was dispensed phrom the Phamous Pharma Planet rX in Houston. That said, and having just landed from a brief fly-by of the Eagle's Nest forum (which, unlike the Badass Gremlin group, I had not even -read- about; how can such a small sector of the car hobby [if AMC is as small as it seems] expect to grow if it remains so divergent?), I, too, agree with what was writ --- even if I'm not fast to fold 5H into a Pampers in hopes it will grow more ethanol. Comfort with unfamiliar colors (in people as well as on cars?) is one of the harder things to master, but, when we turned up our noses at a wildly white/black/pink 1956 Packard Caribbean convertible for $5,000 that looked "loony" in 1976, what did we smell when it's worth $150,000 in 2016? Maybe $1,500,000 in 2056? Sweet success or eau de dumb? http://www.treasurecoastmustangs.com/1972-ford-ppg.jpg We can love cars in resale red, bad boy black, or shades of silver (I silently snicker seeing several snob-setters show up in similar silver/gray/beige painted steel --- especially if they run from rental-fleet Taurus to retinal-heat Porsche and they all ran from point A to point B), but we needn't "Yuck!" at purples, limes, or, yes, browns. Number three: they're likely less common than the "loved" colors, number two [!]: they're likely more valuable in terms of telling the "real" story of the steel they cling to, and number one [!]: they're the cars that the -real- car lovers get all hot and bothered over, or they get a warm, wet, and tingly feeling from. Not like purple rain. A close-coupled two-tone Pierce comes to mind; to most, it looks totally bogus, but it's exactly how it was built. It was a unique statement then and it's an even more unique statement now. It's the kind of car that -real- auto history -really- needs to see. Two convertibles come to mind too: two variations on one tune composed by Lincoln. Both were Full Classics, both went on American auction blocks just this 2006 year: one in April and one in August. One sold for twice what it may -really- be worth: in black paint/black top piped maroon/maroon leather with gold-plated [yuck, but that's just my opinion, which has no merit in terms of car history] interior trim. Story says: "It was a gift from the president of the NY Yankess to Babe Ruth" (with a 1940 Rhinebeck horse show ticket found under the carpet); provenance says: "Whoa now, this ain't Monopoly money [$407,000] we crazies just throw around." Except for the story and the g[u]ilt, just another #1 Zephyr. Just not one -really- wonderful set of old wheels. The other Lincoln was just as #1 in condition and one giant leap above in design: not one-off, but as designed by LeBaron and built by Brunn, it was one of just 20% of the 1935s that were -not- factory-bodied (as if the factory bodies were just chopped liver instead --- oh, how little do our musclecar contingents know!) and it was built on what was probably the finest (remember that when you count K cars!) chassis Ford ever made --- of which just over 1,000 (remember that when you count SC/360s!) were assembled. Do the math. 20% of 1041; maybe 20 of 'em custom-bodied convertible coupes. They didn't just offer SUVs, 2-doors, 4-doors, and [wow!] retractables way back then. http://www.pontiac.com/g6convertible/index.jsp Life was very different for America and for Ford: when Hudson (and even Nash) were big and "big" in body styles. What's more, this car had the last of the "flowing" fenders --- it was one of the last cars that looked -really- great before cars began to look really -good- again in 1955. Twenty years of so-so. As if the mid-'70s went on until the '91 Caprice was spawned until now. Yaris? Versa? And they say that the Gremlin and Pacer looked bad? V-12, twin sidemounts, whitewalls on chrome wire wheels --- what more could you ask? So it sold for just $6,000 over estimate and just $186,000 less than the black one. So kids, the '35 is just about half the car the '40 is. Money never lies, right? Wrong. Eyes lie. Its paint blinded the buyers to quality, history, provenance, and value: they were too yellow. Maybe they were too uncomfortable or maybe they just never learned how wide and fun the -real- world of cars was. (On a very slim chance that anyone is -really- interested, both Lincolns can be seen on the sites that sold 'em.) http://www.rmauctions.com/ Maybe Lincoln can learn from AMC: it never put a "grill" on a "Rouge" and no Lincoln was ever bodied by "LeBarn." http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=10076&item=330011890011 Maybe Studebaker can learn from AMC too: it never built this chromed-and-two-toned car. Cue your auto volcanoes! http://tinyurl.com/raqox "Look at those AMC wheels!" "What?? They are by Mopar." Open your yellow umbrellas. The yellow rain could fall. In 1989, when J. E. Stiglitz wrote: "There is a fool born every moment" http://www2.gsb.columbia.edu/faculty/jstiglitz/index.cfm and altered P. T. Barnum's famous: "There's a sucker born every minute" http://www.newyorkcitywalk.com/html/interactive_W150th.html he wasn't thinking about the economic theories of selling collector cars, but both J. E. and P. T. saw something. On September 20, 2006, when Scott McNealy said: "Selling is what business is all about!", and "Why don't you get together and build a community online?" and "Don't let the lowest common denominator slow you down.", he was not just thinking about how to make today's AMC as big as the big car company his father would proably have led in the early '70s (after he helped to create the Javelin/AMX/SC/Rambler/Machine/etc. AMC that you see as "the" AMC still), but he, too, saw something. Whatever YOU see when you see a Ginger Maverick, a Brown Spirit, a Lime Ambassador, a two-t P-A, a three-t Packard, http://www.cincyconcours.com/1999/99-030.jpg or a yellow Lincoln beside a yellow Gremlin, keep your mind as open as your eyes are: you may see some gold in AMC. http://www.cardomain.com/ride/837334 http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/object/article?f=/chronicle/archive/2005/03/14/MNGU6BOT6J1.DTL&o=1 What's next, oddball, ugly, loosers? Just what are you still waiting for? Some yellow torqu [sic] tube aliens? Someone, sometime, who will see AMC? Guess what, you're that someone. And that sometime is today. Seek not some old AMC son. http://www.sun.com/aboutsun/index.jsp http://www.sun.com/aboutsun/media/ceo/mgt_mcnealy.html Seek some newer AMC sun. Shine on silver or gold. http://www.amcrc.com/sturb05/N2-2.JPG Make a "new" AMC better. Yell! Hell! Rebel!!!!! > -----Original Message----- > From: Eddie Stakes [mailto:eddiestakes@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] > Sent: Wednesday, September 20, 2006 10:22 AM > To: Mahoney, John; Tate, Randy > Subject: you two enjoy this > > This is a interesting comment below by Doc. The reason why is > recently on > fee-bait there was a 73 Hornet for sale. Great looking car I may add, > however, the poor fellow was fending off a lot of > questions...ok, fending > off a lot of comments, by people who had emailed him telling > him he had a > 74. ------------------------------ Message: 3 Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2006 05:27:47 +0000 From: "johnny kazek" <johnnykazek@xxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: [AMC-List] torqu tube Q??? To: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx Message-ID: <BAY119-F25D00658B97F0F49283B38A5210@xxxxxxx> Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed Hello, this is Johnny, the guy J. Johnson so kindly reposted the torque tube question for. Sorry I didn't find you guys earlier, thanks so much for the wealth of information. If I could give just a little more info, when shifting into R or L, there's a little bump, like it wants to move but it just won't. Transmission fluid is full now, but it wasn't when I got vehicle a few weeks ago. Fairly certain the emergency break is not on. Took a winch to get it onto trailer and 3 guys pushing it off into parking space when unloading, but it did roll albeit reluctantly. Of course brake pedal goes to floor, bleeders for brakes are broken off, will have to completely rebuild (lines too), but they don't seem to be frozen. Car has about 60k which I believe to be correct due to documentation. I will check first thing for the sheared hub. Have a feeling I'm not going to be that lucky. If that's not it then I guess I need to find out what's going on under/behind that torque tube, unless anyone has any other ideas and I understand your suggestions correctly. Thanks especially for info on springs, wasn't sure if I needed to compress them or not. Engine runs great on this thing, could be a fun wagon if I can get this sorted out. Will post results as they come. Thank you very much for all your help and patience. -- Johnny ------------------------------ Message: 4 Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2006 00:11:42 -0700 (PDT) From: Tom Jennings <tomj@xxxxxxx> Subject: Re: [AMC-List] AMC drivers To: AMC-List <amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0609171149090.6498@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII On Sun, 17 Sep 2006, farna@xxxxxxx wrote: > John Elle has a good point. You can't expect a 26+ year old car to be as comfortable or perform as well as a much newer one. Time and technology march on. There's nothing wrong with a modern daily driver to keep miles off your AMC. Use the driver to run around most of the time and the AMC for the pleasure driving. Oh absolutely -- I still worry I sound like I was criticising John. I'm not. You are right, time marches on, newer cars ride better overall, paid attention to sound insulation, etc. Cup holders! It's all tradeoffs... my Hornet at 60 is happy; the Honda is happy at 80. So I go slow, it requires living differently, which by no conincidence is in a direction I want, eg. slower, take MY time not the pushy commuting a-holes rushing to jobs they probably hate. Sometimes I take minor highways and get to work later. The drive up to Gerlach last month, in the Rambler, took 12 hours. It's about 600 miles. I was in the slow lane the whole time, past almost no one! It's an acquired, reactionary, state of mind. ------------------------------ Message: 5 Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2006 02:57:14 -0700 From: "Andy&Tonja&Phoebe Ray" <raysinvegas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: [AMC-List] AMC forum? To: <amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Message-ID: <002101c6de2d$7b8cfdd0$b1d5e404@yourwg5n33dutv> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Obviously we need a new forum, since the new/old one is officially gone. Do we have some one who will actually administrate it and not BAIL at the first sign of trouble? I need an AMC/Rambler fix. This list is OK, but I only receive 75% of the posts listed. What say you? ------------------------------ Message: 6 Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2006 10:54:36 -0400 From: "J. Johnson" <imfatdad@xxxxxxxxx> Subject: [AMC-List] Torqu tube Q??? To: amcrelay@xxxxxxxxxxxx Message-ID: <ADVANCES62jFbUcOV1E00000530@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" An embedded and charset-unspecified text was scrubbed... Name: not available Url: http://www.amc-list.com/pipermail/amc-list/attachments/20060921/2151e1b1/attachment.ksh -------------- next part -------------- An embedded message was scrubbed... From: J. Johnson <imfatdad@xxxxxxxxx> Subject: Torqu tube Q??? Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2006 10:54:36 -0400 Size: 3478 Url: http://www.amc-list.com/pipermail/amc-list/attachments/20060921/2151e1b1/attachment.mht ------------------------------ Message: 7 Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2006 07:45:34 -0400 From: "Richard Estermyer" <javelinman74@xxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: [AMC-List] Motor For Sale - MI To: mail@xxxxxxxxxxxx Message-ID: <BAY106-F5BB3CF517A238E11BECF3DD210@xxxxxxx> Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed Hey gang, Just a note about a fresh 304 up for sale here in Michigan. Contact number at the bottom. A friend sent it to me from a guy he works with and this is all the info we have. Good Luck Richard Richard Estermyer 6235 S. Mohawk Avenue Ypsilanti, MI 48197 734.483.5187 evenings 734.417.9456 NEW cell javelinman74@xxxxxxxxxxx Here is the info I have. + 1972 AMC Motor + 304ci V8 + Bored .030 over + Reconditioned rods and crank ARP fasteners + Reconditioned cylinder heads, New valves and seats etc. + Crane cam, lifters, valve springs, chrome molly push rods + MSD billet distributor w/blaster coil + Edelbrock aluminum intake + New water pump and Fuel pump + Reconditioned alternator + Have all receipts + Motor painted blue + New Hedman jet coated headers + Over $3500.00 invested asking $2000.00 + His name is James and he can be reached at 1-734-525-0821 ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list End of AMC-List Digest, Vol 8, Issue 38 ***************************************