The Ujoint used by the late 60's in the Americans is common as dirt. I found a 77 Pinto station wagon shaft a direct bolt in to my T5 swap. The Ujoint on the Pinto was identical in dimensions albiet the pintos are beefier! IIRC I used the Pintos ujoint, rm strikes again. It was in perfect shape, so I washed it up packed it with synthetic grease and used it. I likewise am still running Timken wheel bearings in the front of my American that can out of a very rusty 68 American I parted that only had 43k on it. They too were like new, all the finish on the races shone like new. My rotors had new races in place, so I packed the 68 era Timkens and put them in. I'd bet they are made of better metal than half the crap you get now a days. -- Mark Price Morgantown, WV 1969 AMC Rambler, 4.0L, EFI, T-5 2004 Grand Cherokee Laredo, 4.7L, Quadratrc II " Chronic Pain Hurts" -------------- Original message ---------------------- From: adh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (Sandwich Maker) > " From: Tom Jennings <tomj@xxxxxxx> > " > " On Wed, 5 Mar 2008, Bruce Griffis wrote: > " > " > Okay - I'm guessing I've got a non-synchro first in the '65 American > " > 330 with 3 on the tree. It likes to go into first when I'm at a full > " > stop. That's cool. I missed a shift once or twice. It will take some > " > getting used to. > " > " That's the infamous T96. It has a sliding first/reverse gear. You > " CANNOT shift it while moving (unless you get good at shifting > " into reverse, bringing the revs up to exactly what it will be > " in first, before shifting). > > you mean double-clutching. shifting into -neutral-, dropping the > clutch, matching revs, then clutching and shifting into 1st. i > practised it for almost 20 years before i found a better solution... > > " As far as I know, it is the only manual transmission that fits > " in that chassis short of hot rod modifications. > > the t14 was std on '68 232s and all '69 sixes, maybe 2bbl 290s too. i > put one behind my '68 199. it needed no adaptation on the engine side > but it's ~2" shorter than the t96 that came out, and i had to lengthen > the 1-r shift rod to reach the tranny properly. > > i was lucky on the length; my t14 was a '75 and by '68 even american > 199s used common u-joints, so i was given a '73-ish yoke that fit my > driveshaft and was long enough to reach the tranny - longer by far > than the original '68 yoke. > > afaik and fyi the driveshaft used with the '68-9 232s was also used in > '68-'70 232 javelins, and t14s had the coarse warner spline '68-'71 [a > fine mopar tf904 spline '72-6]. with the non-big-nut rear and this > matching driveshaft, i believe the t14 would bolt into any '64-9 > american with a six. > ________________________________________________________________________ > Andrew Hay the genius nature > internet rambler is to see what all have seen > adh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and think what none thought > _______________________________________________ > Amc-list mailing list > Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx > http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list