Man I got a lot done today, makes up for all the weeks I get 2 - 4 hours total to myself! On Sat. we were at U-Pull-Parts looking for Escort parts for the 24hrs of LeMons car. (Anyone know what Escort came with 15" wheels?!) Spotted a 63 Classic sedan, 195.6ohv and auto. Bingo! Went back today and scored well. It's the second or maybe one I've seen in 4 years in a junkyard. I pulled the head, easy enough. Popped the cover -- seven (7) pushrods off their rockers... odd... then I notice the starter was PRIED OFF the block... and once I got the exhaust manifold off I noticed the hole that was added to let the bad parts out. Damn thing had grenaded bad; cyls 5 and 6 pistons missing conn rods (they just pushed down). I am fairly sure the camshaft broke hence the pushrods. Ouch. I'm always curious what took a car off the road and into a yard, this one is clear. The head was very recently rebuilt. Spotless in and out, nice clean dark blue paint. Hopefully it means it was recently non-cracked. I plan on stripping it down and having it magnafluxed ASAP so I don't waste my time storing it. It's a spare. Got the gas tank. It's in fine shape, not much rust inside (didn't peek into the roof). A hell of a lot nicer than the tank in the American! Got the filler neck, straps, etc needed to install. Lucky find, that! Saved me a fortune! ALso got the front bumper, 100% straight, no dents at all. Chrome is fair to poor, those mild grey spider web lines. No peeling though, with some Bon Ami it'll look fine. This is a spare too. Pulled the genny, seems fine, commutator flat and square. Some one else took the regulator, and also the steering box. Hauled all this junk in the Classic wagon of course. Some guy walks up to me, up to my armpits in motor, and asks it's that's my Rambler... Mike, runs Goodguys Garage in the valley, AMCRC member, does old cars. I'll go check out his shop soon for the hell of it. Then I went home, cleaned up the workspace (aka concrete driveway on the far side of the property), put the little AMerican up on jacks and pulled out the axle, trans, clutch. This might be the DIRTIEST car job I've ever done. Axle and trans out in 90 minutes. Easy! Umm, is this bad? The driveshaft simply slid off the splines on the pinion. I thought it was nutted on there?! This is a big nut rear... is that a jam nut on a tapered thread meant to jam the splines? What's the point of that?! Otherwise it's all fine and I'll put it back that way unless someone yells. Talk about easy... the trans come out with an OPEN END WRENCH! except the upper right bolt, boo hoo, had to use a socket and extentions. Then came the pain... nearly TWO HOURS to get the trans crossmember off, clutch linkage, starter (PITA^^2), tin cover and bell housing. Clutch came off in 5 minutes. Then the six well-known bolts holding the flywheel on. This motor has so little compression (by design and by wear) ... while under the car (ugh) I used a 4lb hammer and 18" breaker bar and socket to get those miserable bolts out, while rising up on my (now bloody) elbows. Absolutely everything near the trans ("ground zero") was caked in a layer of the most viscous and gritty goo, 45 years of 90 weight and road dust. I've wrenched a lot of old cars but never saw anything like this. It stuck to the putty knife. Nasty. So I've got a 8.5" clutch, and a flywheel that will NOT take the bigger clutch. But since I'm a good packrat and have a fairly advanced case of Rambler Mentality, I have another flywheel and clutch assembly (clutch used, no good) that I matched up -- it's from a 232 -- and it will bolt up exactly perfectly to the 195.6ohv and accept a more easily available, and more substantial, 9" clutch. (Neither flywheel is "double drilled"). (But I have to check that the 9" fits under the odd little bellhousing.) (I find it VERY useful to have one of things like brake shoes, clutch discs, brake drums, etc simply for sizing and comparison. They live outside and get rusty, but I only want them for dimensions. It's been VERY useful...) The clutch disc is 1/32" away from the rivets; the flywheel is shiny but fine; the pressure plate driven surface is flat, but heat-cracked. Right at end-of-life but not gone destructive. Popped the cover of the T96, and it just doesn't look that bad. The dogs look like dogs, nice and pointy still. Gear teeth are smooth and shiny, no cracks, chipped leading edges, or that ground-away dry roughness from overheat and/or lack of oil. But it leaks oil in huge quantities, so it needs rebuilding, but hopefully it will look good once I get it apart and parts cleaned (which of course is when real problems are revealed). _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list