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: Charity AMX (farna@xxxxxxx) 2. Re: Charity AMX (Savage, Pete) 3. Re: Charity AMX (Widiker, John D) 4. Re: Charity AMX (farna@xxxxxxx) 5. Re: '04 Lex LS430 6spd arrived - Fed Ex - (Jim Blair) 6. Re: AMC-List Digest, Vol 8, Issue 48 (Andy) 7. Re: Trans Go > Silicone is NO GO < (Tom Jennings) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Wed, 27 Sep 2006 12:27:45 +0000 From: farna@xxxxxxx Subject: Re: [AMC-List] Charity AMX To: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx (AMC-List), tbenvie@xxxxxxxxxxx Message-ID: <092720061227.12803.451A6E41000842AB0000320321602810600E029D0E00@xxxxxxx> You know Tom, I'm NOT going to get upset with you or your last post. This has been a massive undertaking, more so than anyone who started it (including you and I, though I did have more of an idea of the length of time it could take) could have expected. I wrote a few letters to Hot Rod and and a couple other mags shortly after this started -- they never got published. The AMC hobby in general KNOWS about this car -- it's been talked about a lot on the List and the Forum. Club members have been asked to take the info to their club meetings and see what they could do. Vendors have stepped up and donated a lot of parts. Individuals and a few clubs HAVE stepped up and donated a lot. I KNEW it would take a lot of time, but it's taken more time than even I expected. I expected the car to be ready to go to auction last year. I wouldn't have been disappointed if it was ready to go now. If you have lots of time to devote to finishing the car it COULD be done in a couple months, but ! is ther e any point in rushing the job now? Or is it just that you have the time right now and think you may not later? Send me a personal e-mail if you want to discuss this point, public forums is not the place. Or call me at 302-233-4925. I know parts have been misplaced and "lost in the shuffle", and a few decisions were made on site that I probably wouldn't have made, and I've made decissions that you probably wouldn't have made -- I'm sure it would have been the other way around had our roles been reveresed. I KNEW that would be the nature of the project as it went along, there has ALWAYS been the POTENTIAL that someone around the car could/would INTENTIONALLY swap some part(s) out for their personal benefit. I don't think that has happened, though some things have obviously been misplaced/lost during transportation and changing of hands. There have been honest efforts to minimize this, but surely you didn't think the car could go half way around the coutnry,change hands several times, and not have some of that happen? Each team was supposed to do their own "bush beating" and publicity. Most got some nice local coverage, even Dave got a mention in one of the local papers shortly after he took over the car. As I stated earlier, the general hobby magazines don't seem to care. Maybe now that the car is nearing completion we can get some interest though. I'll make another effort. There HAS been donations outside the hobby. One AACA chapter sent in a donation, and I know that the GA, FL, and TX teams solicited some parts from local suppliers (GA got an amount of credit for whatever they needed from NAPA, for example). Dave DeLabio got a local paint and supply company to donate all the materials (and Zion Auto Body to do the work), and the FL guys got a wheel restorer to powder coatthe wheels. Check the web page out again (http://www.mattsoldcars.com/charityamx/index.html). None of the big name guys like Summit, but we really don't need aftermarket parts. I'll be writing Legendary for seat cover! s soon. The car needed much more body work than anticipated, yes. And other work. "Good for a New England car" isn't saying a lot -- there are lots of southern and western cars with great bodies, but then they need everything else. But we have more people in the hobby capable and willing to do "everything else" -- lots of body work isn't in most people's repertoire of skills -- with some exceptions such as yourself. A 70 AMX means there are lots of one year only parts. We have most of them with the car, which was a big help though (as you pointed out), and the only reason I accepted the car. All the work and POSSIBLE problems meant the car would be a 3-5 year project instead of a 2-3 year one though, I knew that from the beginning. The reason it takes so long is people have lives to live, and it has to be transported and "started from scratch" at each location. That means it's a year at a location and only about three months of weekends are actual work. You don't always have much time to work on projects either. The car had to be transported, which took a month or two to arrange, then off loaded with parts which were inventoried, decissions made as to what work would be attempted, then publicity/donations sought, time found for the work, etc. It takes a lot of time!! All that said, I also understand why you're getting impatient with the project. It should have been completed this year, at least. Even so, I would like the project to get out to another group before it goes back to Boston for final disposition. You offered taking it last year and I thought hard about it. There's not much point in getting impatient to finish now though, and Zion Auto Body WANTED to finish up the body work they started. I have already reached the conclusion that it will be going back to you for the final touches. After much consideration you're the best person to finish it up, and it's fitting since it started with you -- a complete circle. After your last message I wonder if that's the best thing to do, though that's still the plan. I expect you're going to publicly criticize everything that was done other than what you expected or would have done. Or will you realize that this has been a monumental task that has been difficult for those who have done a lot of work on the car and to manage and coordinate in our "spare" time? Right now it appears you're just upset that it's taken so long, and you never realized just what kind of task this would be. Maybe you never will understnad how difficult this has been -- you're a lot more dedicated to the hobby than the average AMCer -- I'll be the first to admit, and honor you with, that fact. I don't think you'd have done any better, just given up and pulled it back to finish yourself a lot sooner. The effort has been more for the AMC community, as much as for the charities, than for the car itself. I hope you realize that. If a speedy effort was all that was wanted, a car in better body condition and much easier to get parts for (Gremlin, or 66-69 American/Rogue, even a Javelin -- almost anything but an AMX) would have been chosen. It wouldn't have made as much money, but it would have been finished much sooner. The AMX has some people intimidated, they don't want to do anything (especially now!) because they don't want the criticism that some people have been giving the project, and the fact that it's an AMX. The car will get looked at harder than a Gremlin/Rambler/Javelin (non-AMX model) would. I anticipated some of that when you offered the car, but decided to go for it anyway. I sometimes regret it -- another model would have been easier to deal with, and a second car would be starting rounds now. In the long run I think as much money would have been raised on two cars as with this one AMX, and possibly in the same amount of time -- the car wouldn't have got passed around as large an area. The biggest problem with this project is that the AMC community has been burned by the experience and criticism it has generated. I'm not sure another project like this will be attempted even on a car that needs much less work. But I still don't regret the effort, and may try something similar again. Keeping it in one region might help. I was going to say getting committments before the project started, but we had some enough of those to last a couple years -- who knew no one else would step up? Anyway, that's enough! Time to pull together and get finished, not for any resentments as to how things have come together up to now and further criticism. -- Frank Swygert Publisher, "American Motors Cars" Magazine (AMC) For all AMC enthusiasts http://farna.home.att.net/AIM.html (free download available!) -------------original message---------------------- Re: [AMC-List] Charity AMX Date: Tuesday, September 26, 2006 07:56 PM From: Thomas Benvie <tbenvie@xxxxxxxxxxx> Frank, once again you are missing the point. The ball was dropped long before you deployed overseas. Fact is, the project never became what it could of become-there has been little if any press exposure, little if any solicitation of donations or parts outside of the AMC hobby, and very little exposure inside the hobby. Only a few people stepped forward tomake anything happen as far as actual work-which is okay, because a few are better than none. there have been some pretty rotten decisions made about the car, parts to buy, status of work, etc. The car was worse than you expected? What does that mean? you got a car with stright floors and gussets-not bad for New England. And it was a 70, and mostly complete, a 2 owner car. the quarter was damaged worse than expected-well, when the car left here it had a mint used qurter for the side that we knew was damaged. When damage to the other side was discovered I donated the other side, and dave from Ga. willingly came up to Bost on and picked it up./ It left here with ram air, but it turned up missing-I donated another complete set, with air cleaner. The wheels were bad- (but not when it left) so I sent out some more, complete with NOS trim rings, etc. more was asked, I sent out more and more. last i knew there were two right side seats-how did that happen. Missing a rocker molding and window-where did it go? On and on and on. Now you say you need a "few more weeks" to find someone else to finish it. you've had a few years. "Won't have it done in time"-says who? yeah, if you continue to procrastinate nothing will get done. If I knew you or AIM would somehow be in charge the car would have stayed right here in Mass. It's been 6 years-a lot of people have donated a lot of time, money, and parts to get this done. No time to wait Frank-use the cash you have to get it shipped back here. it will be finished and if it is ion the shape i am told it is in, it will be ready for auction. The guys left in the New England Club will get it done, find the resources to get it shipped and to the auction. Enough is enough-time for excuses are over. "LAST CALL" for what, Frank-I am offering the help needed to get it done, and get it done now. Tom, yes, the car has stalled in Wisconsin. The main reason I've let it go for a while is the body shop with the car has been doing a superb job AND a lot of work -- that and I've been away in Afghanistan until a week ago. It NEEDS to move this year!! I HAVE been beating the bushes to get another club/group/individual to take the car and complete the interior and the exterior/mechanical miscellaneous items that still need attention. It saddens me to think that no one wants to do any work on the car in that area of the country. There are groups in the mid west, supposedly, and I contacted a few individuals who were going to "bring it up" at meetings. I never heard back. It was only through the monumental efforst of David DeLabio in Racine that the car didn't get stranded in Wisconsin. We lucked out really -- Zion auto body has done top notch work! They found where the car had been in a wreck and it wasn't fully repaired but patched over -- the right rocker was bent in about 1/8" making the quarter tough to fit. Rather than patch it back up to look right they straightened everything properly. We couldn't have got better body work, but I'm sure they are ready to move the car by now. I have to tell you, I'm, pissed off at the mid west AMC enthusiasts in general. I know there are some who would have liked to take it but don't have shop/garage space for the car. But you'd think someone in the mid west would be able to do something. This isn't an AIM magazine project, though I have been sponsoring it, it was/is an AMC community project. But there are a few people I haven't contacted directly yet. Jock Jocewicz is one of them. I had planned on doing just that, then Dave located Zion Auto Body and they agreed to do all the body work. You reading this Jock? Drop me an e-mail or call me (anyone interested in taking the car for work) at 302-233-4925. This is the LAST CALL for someone to winter the car and get some work done. The car was rougher than we (those who conceived the project) expected, and there have been a few bumps along the way, but there's no reason it should have taken this long. If I can't get anyone interested, the car will go back to Tom in the next few weeks. He shouldn't have to do as much work as it needs to get finished. I don't think it can get completed in time for the winter auction, but it could be completed for spring. So, barring someone actually taking the car for at least SOME more work, is there anyone on the list willing to assist with transporting it to Tom's home near Boston? Yes, there are some funds left. If anyone can get a discounted rate or transport the car for expenses that would be preferred to having a transportation company do it. Give me a couple weeks to beat a few more bushes. I just got back home from Afghanistan -- haven't had time to do anything yet! See what's needed and what's been done at http://www.mattsoldcars.com/charityamx/index.html. The last report was almost a year ago, but the car hasn't just been sitting at Zion. They have continued working on the body as time permits and completed more of the work they started. I haven't heard from Dave since I got back in the country, but will be contacting him for an update (just called and left a message, and sent an e-mail!). If all went as planned it should be painted and mainly need interior work now. ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Wed, 27 Sep 2006 09:06:27 -0400 From: "Savage, Pete" <PSavage@xxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: [AMC-List] Charity AMX To: <amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Message-ID: <BD261180E6D35F4D9D32F3E44FD3D901047B69BC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Frank, If you are willing to pay for the diesel I will volunteer to transport the car from WI to Tom's house in Mass... I don't have the time to help work on it, but I can sign up for a road trip. It has been a while since I went on one and... Maybe someone could meet me half way, say the Ohio border... Peter -----Original Message----- From: amc-list-bounces@xxxxxxx [mailto:amc-list-bounces@xxxxxxx]On Behalf Of farna@xxxxxxx Sent: Tuesday, September 26, 2006 6:16 PM To: tbenvie@xxxxxxxxxxx; AMC-List Subject: [AMC-List] Charity AMX Tom, yes, the car has stalled in Wisconsin. The main reason I've let it go for a while is the body shop with the car has been doing a superb job AND a lot of work -- that and I've been away in Afghanistan until a week ago. It NEEDS to move this year!! I HAVE been beating the bushes to get another club/group/individual to take the car and complete the interior and the exterior/mechanical miscellaneous items that still need attention. It saddens me to think that no one wants to do any work on the car in that area of the country. There are groups in the mid west, supposedly, and I contacted a few individuals who were going to "bring it up" at meetings. I never heard back. It was only through the monumental efforst of David DeLabio in Racine that the car didn't get stranded in Wisconsin. We lucked out really -- Zion auto body has done top notch work! They found where the car had been in a wreck and it wasn't fully repaired but patched over -- the right rocker was bent in about 1/8" making the quarter tough to fit. Rather than patch it back up to look right they straightened everything properly. We couldn't have got better body work, but I'm sure they are ready to move the car by now. I have to tell you, I'm, pissed off at the mid west AMC enthusiasts in general. I know there are some who would have liked to take it but don't have shop/garage space for the car. But you'd think someone in the mid west would be able to do something. This isn't an AIM magazine project, though I have been sponsoring it, it was/is an AMC community project. But there are a few people I haven't contacted directly yet. Jock Jocewicz is one of them. I had planned on doing just that, then Dave located Zion Auto Body and they agreed to do all the body work. You reading this Jock? Drop me an e-mail or call me (anyone interested in taking the car for work) at 302-233-4925. This is the LAST CALL for someone to winter the car and get some work done. The car was rougher than we (those who conceived the project) expected, and there have been a few bumps along the way, but there's no reason it should have taken this long. If I can't get anyone interested, the car will go back to Tom in the next few weeks. He shouldn't have to do as much work as it needs to get finished. I don't think it can get completed in time for the winter auction, but it could be completed for spring. So, barring someone actually taking the car for at least SOME more work, is there anyone on the list willing to assist with transporting it to Tom's home near Boston? Yes, there are some funds left. If anyone can get a discounted rate or transport the car for expenses that would be preferred to having a transportation company do it. Give me a couple weeks to beat a few more bushes. I just got back home from Afghanistan -- haven't had time to do anything yet! See what's needed and what's been done at http://www.mattsoldcars.com/charityamx/index.html. The last report was almost a year ago, but the car hasn't just been sitting at Zion. They have continued working on the body as time permits and completed more of the work they started. I haven't heard from Dave since I got back in the country, but will be contacting him for an update (just called and left a message, and sent an e-mail!). If all went as planned it should be painted and mainly need interior work now. -- Frank Swygert Publisher, "American Motors Cars" Magazine (AMC) For all AMC enthusiasts http://farna.home.att.net/AIM.html (free download available!) _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com ------------------------------ Message: 3 Date: Wed, 27 Sep 2006 09:58:39 -0400 From: "Widiker, John D" <john.widiker@xxxxxxx> Subject: Re: [AMC-List] Charity AMX To: <amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Message-ID: <166687AF0F5A7E48A457F68AE39A6F13061DF7A8@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" My next door shop owner is a good guy and does show quality paint, also my buddy just returned from Wyotech where he went to school for custom interiors. I send work to both of them and have a few favors I can cash. I'm pretty sure I could get both of those issues addressed. My cousin Wally does a lot of media work and has some great contacts for getting it some press. If the car made it's way to Michigan I'd be willing to facilitate these things. I can start making calls today for commitments if this sounds like it would help. I have no intention of getting caught up in a pissing match, or tying up my shops floor space for a year, these could both be done fairly quickly, and it would be nice to see this project completed. If this sounds good I can be reached at 248 408-7038 and you can see my shop at www.ttdmotorsports.com if you click on the customer gallery you can see pics of the pro-street Nova my neighbor painted. ~John -----Original Message----- From: amc-list-bounces@xxxxxxx [mailto:amc-list-bounces@xxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Savage, Pete Sent: Wednesday, September 27, 2006 9:06 AM To: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: [AMC-List] Charity AMX Frank, If you are willing to pay for the diesel I will volunteer to transport the car from WI to Tom's house in Mass... I don't have the time to help work on it, but I can sign up for a road trip. It has been a while since I went on one and... Maybe someone could meet me half way, say the Ohio border... Peter -----Original Message----- From: amc-list-bounces@xxxxxxx [mailto:amc-list-bounces@xxxxxxx]On Behalf Of farna@xxxxxxx Sent: Tuesday, September 26, 2006 6:16 PM To: tbenvie@xxxxxxxxxxx; AMC-List Subject: [AMC-List] Charity AMX Tom, yes, the car has stalled in Wisconsin. The main reason I've let it go for a while is the body shop with the car has been doing a superb job AND a lot of work -- that and I've been away in Afghanistan until a week ago. It NEEDS to move this year!! I HAVE been beating the bushes to get another club/group/individual to take the car and complete the interior and the exterior/mechanical miscellaneous items that still need attention. It saddens me to think that no one wants to do any work on the car in that area of the country. There are groups in the mid west, supposedly, and I contacted a few individuals who were going to "bring it up" at meetings. I never heard back. It was only through the monumental efforst of David DeLabio in Racine that the car didn't get stranded in Wisconsin. We lucked out really -- Zion auto body has done top notch work! They found where the car had been in a wreck and it wasn't fully repaired but patched over -- the right rocker was bent in about 1/8" making the quarter tough to fit. Rather than patch it back up to look right they straightened everything properly. We couldn't have got better body work, but I'm sure they are ready to move the car by now. I have to tell you, I'm, pissed off at the mid west AMC enthusiasts in general. I know there are some who would have liked to take it but don't have shop/garage space for the car. But you'd think someone in the mid west would be able to do something. This isn't an AIM magazine project, though I have been sponsoring it, it was/is an AMC community project. But there are a few people I haven't contacted directly yet. Jock Jocewicz is one of them. I had planned on doing just that, then Dave located Zion Auto Body and they agreed to do all the body work. You reading this Jock? Drop me an e-mail or call me (anyone interested in taking the car for work) at 302-233-4925. This is the LAST CALL for someone to winter the car and get some work done. The car was rougher than we (those who conceived the project) expected, and there have been a few bumps along the way, but there's no reason it should have taken this long. If I can't get anyone interested, the car will go back to Tom in the next few weeks. He shouldn't have to do as much work as it needs to get finished. I don't think it can get completed in time for the winter auction, but it could be completed for spring. So, barring someone actually taking the car for at least SOME more work, is there anyone on the list willing to assist with transporting it to Tom's home near Boston? Yes, there are some funds left. If anyone can get a discounted rate or transport the car for expenses that would be preferred to having a transportation company do it. Give me a couple weeks to beat a few more bushes. I just got back home from Afghanistan -- haven't had time to do anything yet! See what's needed and what's been done at http://www.mattsoldcars.com/charityamx/index.html. The last report was almost a year ago, but the car hasn't just been sitting at Zion. They have continued working on the body as time permits and completed more of the work they started. I haven't heard from Dave since I got back in the country, but will be contacting him for an update (just called and left a message, and sent an e-mail!). If all went as planned it should be painted and mainly need interior work now. -- Frank Swygert Publisher, "American Motors Cars" Magazine (AMC) For all AMC enthusiasts http://farna.home.att.net/AIM.html (free download available!) _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com ------------------------------ Message: 4 Date: Wed, 27 Sep 2006 14:51:14 +0000 From: farna@xxxxxxx Subject: Re: [AMC-List] Charity AMX To: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx (AMC-List) Message-ID: <092720061451.11337.451A8FE20001BAC300002C4921603763160E029D0E00@xxxxxxx> Maybe Tom just needed to stir up some people! John Barncord and John Widiker have both now expressed an interest in taking the car for a bit, and we've got a transportation offer from Pete Savage! I'll be in communication with all three shortly. One of my fall projects (after I get caught up -- should be near the end of this week) was to get this project back on track and near completion, but Tom Benvie jumped in before I could (which is a good thing, BTW). To let everyone know -- the plan is for the car to have one more stop, get what can be done on the interior and detail work done, then get the car back to Tom for any remaining work this spring. I hope that is satisfactory to all involved. It's been a long project, and it has seemingly stalled while the car has been in Wisconsin. Much necessary body work got done over the two years it was there though, so I'm not entirely disappointed -- I think it will prove to be beneficial in the long run. But it has taken much longer than anticipated or expected, and Tom has a right to be a bit upset. He started the project and would like to see it come to fruition. It will be fitting that he complete the car's journey. This is open for discussion, since most who have worked on the car read the list. Feel free to post your comments. -- Frank Swygert Publisher, "American Motors Cars" Magazine (AMC) For all AMC enthusiasts http://farna.home.att.net/AIM.html (free download available!) ------------------------------ Message: 5 Date: Wed, 27 Sep 2006 07:51:41 -0700 From: "Jim Blair" <carnuck@xxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: [AMC-List] '04 Lex LS430 6spd arrived - Fed Ex - To: mail@xxxxxxxxxxxx Message-ID: <BAY114-F1103804CC26AC638F7542AAC1A0@xxxxxxx> Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed Brian, the black hole of Joisey seems to do a lot to Fed Ex and UPS shipments. I've been told Guido has a lot to do with it. The pallet is probably firewood by now and I would check EBay auctions and Craigslist to see if the trans may have been listed for sale in that vicinity with no takers (which is why you finally got it) Jim Blair, Seattle, WA '84 J10 Black Jack (getting lifted and stroked!), '73 J4000 304/TH400/QT tow truck http://www.virtualjeep.com AMC list subscription options link http://www.amxfiles.com/amc-list/options.cfm _________________________________________________________________ The next generation of Search?say hello! http://imagine-windowslive.com/minisites/searchlaunch/?locale=en-us&FORM=WLMTAG ------------------------------ Message: 6 Date: Wed, 27 Sep 2006 08:58:05 -0700 (GMT-07:00) From: Andy <raysinvegas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: [AMC-List] AMC-List Digest, Vol 8, Issue 48 To: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx Message-ID: <5387907.1159372685591.JavaMail.root@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Hi Bill, these knobs are held on by a set screw on the bottom and back(dash side). You might have to stand on your head to see them! IIRC, they are allen style, could be flathead screws but I think allen. Congrats on finding a good lens for your gauges, NOT an easy task! BTW, because you basically have to dismantle the entire dash, this would be a very good time to replace the instrument cluster voltage regulator, and all of those light bulbs. Andy Ray '64 American 440H(2) '68 Javelin SST 343 >Message: 5 >Date: Tue, 26 Sep 2006 19:23:49 -0700 (PDT) >From: Bill Serckie <amo9123@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> >Subject: [AMC-List] 1965 American Instrument cluster removal...HELP > PLEASE !!! >To: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx >Message-ID: <20060927022349.47056.qmail@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 > >Hello, > > I am in the process of replacing the instrument cluster glass (plastic) on my 1965 American 220. Does anyone out there know the secret to removing the defroster selector knob and temperature control switch knob. They have probably never been removed and I do not want to take any chances. > > Any advice would be greatly appreciated. > > Thanks, > > Bill Serckie > > 1964 Classic 660 > 1965 American 220 ------------------------------ Message: 7 Date: Wed, 27 Sep 2006 11:44:10 -0700 (PDT) From: Tom Jennings <tomj@xxxxxxx> Subject: Re: [AMC-List] Trans Go > Silicone is NO GO < To: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0609271139460.6222@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII On Wed, 27 Sep 2006, Russell Neyhart wrote: > ...I changed the trans. pan gasket and filter on my Eagle's TF998 a few > weeks ago finding that the "rubber/neoprene" (or whatever it's made of) > pan gasket had decided to retire after almost 20-years of service > (probably). The first one I tried was a filter kit with a cork gasket > (actually the kit came with two gaskets for different pans crumpled up > and stuffed into the box with the filter!) that wasted no time letting > the "pesky" ATF out. I tried unsuccessfully to 1) find a replacement > rubber pan gasket, or 2) find a parts counter person willing to turn > away from the screen and blow the dust off the "ancient scrolls" (a.k.a. > parts books) and see what wisdom they might have contained within. I > finally went to the local Jeep (former AMC-Jeep), after doing my own > research of course to see what else that gasket might have fit, and got > a new pan gasket. The interesting thing is that rather than cork or > rubber, the gasket was nylon. This made it a breeze to install and so > far it has been working fine. Unfortunately no dancers were available to > help. :-( No dancers, eh? How the hell did you get any work done?! My story is: old but working OK A904 dropped off at Westminster Transmissions for rebuild. All's well, except the pan leaked; cork gasket, and the old OEM pan looked un-traight between bolt holes (eg. overtightened). Rather than screw around, I ordered a deep-sump (Chrysler) pan and (rubber-like) gasket from Summit. Good deal! But like an idiot I siliconed it on. I have not yet bought a new gasket. The TransGo catalog I have says I have to provide my own 904 gasket (comes with 727). I don't want crap cork either. I was thinking of calling B&M or one of those places and see what they use. But do you know/recall the specific application, or part number, for that new-fangled nylon gasket? That sounds good! ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list End of AMC-List Digest, Vol 8, Issue 49 ***************************************