Almost forgot! The OD unit spreads the gears out better, just like a four speed would. It reduces rpm at cruising speed, but everything depends on the rear axle ratio. Non-OD cars were geared for best take-off and cruising speed with a standard three speed transmission. That means the gearing will be too high (low numbered) when the trans is in OD. The Borg-Warner OD units have a gear ratio of 0.70:1. A standard three speed car with a 3.08 axle ratio would be like having the same car with a 2.38 rear axle. Too high for first gear with a three speed, and too high for the engine to pull effectively in OD. Engine rpm would be so low in OD that the engine would struggle to hold speed even on a level. So you have to reduce the axle ratio to compensate. A typical OD car would have a 3.31 rear axle or even lower (like a 3.78). How would a lower gear help economy? A 3.78 car with OD would be just like the same car with a 3.08 at cruising speed, right? Yes, it would, but it would also have a much lower first gear and a better gear ratio spread between first and fourth (third + OD). The engine would work less getting the car moving, and that increases economy in city traffic. The 3.31 would be a better choice for a highway cruiser of course. So why did the auto OD unit become popular in the first place -- a four speed trans makes more sense! The OD unit was developed in the late teens/early 20s, way before the automatic transmission, which was developed in the very late 30s and still expensive until the late 40s. The old engines were big and torquey at low rpm and didn't put out much horsepower for their size (a 1935 Nash Ambassador had a 260.8 cubic inch straight six that developed 100 hp @ 3400 rpm, 110 lb/ft torque @ 350 rpm, compression ratio was 5.25:1). First was only used to get a car rolling from a dead stop, after that only second and third were used to reduce shifting. With the automatic OD unit once you got up to third gear there was no shifting needed at all, just let off the gas to shift into OD, floor it to shift out. Sort of a poor man's two speed auto trans. With careful driving one hardly ever had to shift the trans down at all, unless the car was at a dead stop. Any other time just lug it a bit in third until it got back up to speed -- the old long stroke motors could handle the lugging! With changing times came changes in engineering thinking and transmissions. You can't drive an old car like a new one, or vice versa! Try to lug a modern stick shift car and you'll get "the jerks" or choke it down! -- Frank Swygert Publisher, "American Motors Cars" Magazine (AMC) For all AMC enthusiasts http://farna.home.att.net/AMC.html (free download available!) _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list