The mount holes holding the torque tube to the transmission ripped out? Now I've NEVER seen that before! 1. What bent the panhard rod was the brakes. The axle stopped, the rest of the car didn't. Same thing going up on the trailer. With the T-Tube disconnected, there's nothing holding the axle in place except the panhard rod and shocks. The only bad thing about a T-Tube drive is the car can't be easily moved with the trans or T-Tube out. I bolted a 2x4 frame on an old rear axle and pushed that under a (junked) car to move it. I've heard of people tying up the T-Tube then using rope pulled tight to the front and rear of the axle to move one. If you don't use rope to the front and rear of the body, you hit a hole/bump with a tire and the tire stops -- car keeps moving forward until something stops it (shocks or panhard rod -- which bend -- or brake lines -- which can break!), or the body "falls off" the springs. 2. Are you sure the bolts didn't work loose on you though? It was recently out of the car. If the bolts worked loose that would be the clunk and vibration you've been feeling. That would make one problem solved! ;> Could just be metal fatigue, but I seriously doubt it. Maybe all that brake testing you've been doing lately. Didn't you say that the front brakes aren't doing much work? I was jokingly mentioning this, but now I think it's a serious statement. The T-Tube wasn't designed to take the stress of doing most of the stopping from the back!! You definitely need a correctly sized master cylinder. If the bolts weren't loose, that's most likely the problem -- rear brakes doing way to much work. The flange could have bent, causing the bolts to get loose. The two -- looses bolts and to much stopping force in the rear -- could have combined to cause the problem. I'm willing to go out on a limb and say that's it. 3. DEFINITELY reinforce the holes on the T-Tube flange now that they have ripped out. Use GRADED washers -- grade five should be more than sufficient. There's no telling what kind of steel common washers are made from -- whatever was cheap and/or on hand most likely. Look closely at the tube near the flange and you'll see where the flange is welded to the tube. It could be cut off and another end welded on. You need to get those brakes fixed first!! 4. I thought the 62 had the older two-bolt torque tube setup. Sounds like you have the 63 type. There should be a thick rubber-like pad on the T-Tube flange between the T-Tube and trans flanges. That must be there -- the T-Tube flange moves on the T-Tube. There is an inner flange with the rubber on it that gives as the axle moves up and down. The older setup had two bolts (one on each side) and a couple heavy springs (similar to valve springs). You'd have to see it, I guess. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list