I have spent a fair amount of time beneath the car lately, so I can confirm that mine is a 4-bolt mount to the torque tube and has the 4-point mounts. The current plan is to take the T-96H from the 67 American, which I had got from a fellow lister in nearby Maryland, and bolt that gearbox to the tailshaft and housing from the 62. I hope that there is no roadblock to doing that. I admit that it IS tempting to think of the 199 in the 62 classic, since I know the 7-main-bearing engines a lot better, and since the 196 would be an easy swap into the 64 American Wagon which I have had sitting around for some while. However I would have to figure out how to make the 199 work with the accelerator linkage of the 62 which has a unique rotating linkage which plugs into the throttle plate linkage. Anyway, I guess the 196 should be left where it started since the car is a 57K mile original. I did notice that the shifter arms are completly different shapes and lengths between the 62 and the 67, so I will swap them over. Yes, I will take the parking brake adjuster and the flex hose loose as well - the parking brake may be an adventure since it has probably not been adjusted in 46 years. Original Message: ----------------- From: Frank Swygert farna@xxxxxxx Date: Sun, 06 Jul 2008 14:53:27 -0400 To: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: [Amc-list] Looking for a torque tube T-96 trans w/OD All 56-62 Rambler six cylinder engines/cars use the four point mounts -- two on a lip under the timing cover and two under the bell. Big cars and Americans are the same. 63 Americans use the same four point system. 63+ big cars and 64+ americans use the now familiar "Tri-Poised Power" mounting system (that's where the name comes from) -- one mount on each side of the engine either entered or a little forward of center, and one under the trans. There's no difference in automatic trannys, just manual. Tom mentioned that the trans to bell bolt pattern is different -- the Tri-Poised cars have a "taller" pattern than four point mount cars. The side to side dimension is the same, but the Tri-Poised trans has the lower bolt holes much lower on the bell to give the motor/trans unit more rigidity. So you need the bell and trans for four point or Tri-Poised cars. The speedo cable is different also. On the older bodies the speedo cable gear is on TOP of the output shaft, on the newer ones (63+ big, 64+ small) the gear is on the BOTTOM of the output shaft. This means the cables turn in opposite directions! The drive gear on the output shaft is the same though. To swap between the two you have to have the correct output shaft housing (tailshaft housing). That's the only difference. I discovered this when putting a 65 M-35 auto trans in a 63 American. The manual trannys are the same between torque tube and open drive cars of similar years. The only difference is the torque tube adapter vs. a seal adapter on the OD unit (the open drive car has a short round seal adapter, the rear seal is in the torque tube adapter on big cars) and the tailshaft housing on non-OD cars (with or without a torque tube flange). My car has the 3.78 rear, so I think that it will do well with OD if that were to work out. Now if we can just get some dry weather so I can get out and spin some wrenches! --------------- Date: Sat, 05 Jul 2008 12:20:43 -0700 From: Tom Jennings <tomj@xxxxxxx> oldcars@xxxxxxxxx wrote: > Since the Overdrive T96 should be a bolt in, I am interested in seeing > whether anyone has a torque tube T96 which they would sell. I guess that I > will see whether Mike can get his part, since mine is (apparently) complete > and the '67 T96 gearbox should hopefully bolt up to the '62 tailshaft & > housing and put mine back on the road. Just thought I would see whether I > could upgrade to OD while I was at it. Others here may know details, but you might need to double-check the rear motor mount business, and speedo location. 62 is different than 63-up, which is two mounts under the motor left right, an only one under the trans tail. 62 has two mounts in rear, right? I forget what the 62 "big car" uses, but the American the rear mounts are on the bellhousing, so for that car either would work. This business is easily checked before you buy. Frank points out that the speedo gear and cable comes out of the TOP of the trans on one set of years/models, and out the BOTTOM on the other. Bottom might work in a "top" car, but not vice-versa. Sorry to be a bummer! Yeah, the OD would be a drop-in, and the under dash cable for it easy. But you really need to change the axle ratio at the same time, six or eight. -- 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 -------------------------------------------------------------------- myhosting.com - Premium Microsoft® Windows® and Linux web and application hosting - http://link.myhosting.com/myhosting _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list