Ray, I'm just curious -- have you rebuilt any of the T-96 trannys, or were they all high mileage (80K+) units? What failures have you had (what parts)? I ran a T-96 behind a 4.0L for a short time, I know it's not a strong trans, but it held up. Never had a problem running it behind a 195.6 L-head or OHV, though that was 20 years ago. The weakest point is the 2-3 synchronizer. It wasn't made for aggressive shifting. The 4.0L (stock) made short work of that even with conservative shifting -- the synchro lasted about 100 miles!! It was gone in a week of normal driving. After that I double-clutched and timed shifts for about a year. After 10-15K miles (when I finally replaced it) the gears were showing some wear, looking like they had 40K or more miles on them. The trans was rebuilt with a new gear cluster and input shaft before being put in. Behind a 195.6 in an American the T-96 should be holding up, just don't downshift to first until you're almost at a complete stop, and don't aggressively downshift from 3-2. Upshifts should be fine. If you have it behind a 232, you've exceeded the design capacity. AMC had a special version (T-96J) built for 70-71 Hornets and Gremlins w/232 that had a slightly larger input shaft and bearing that would take a little more torque. Even so it was marginal. That's what I used behind the 4.0L. If you're running a 232 that explains everything! _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list