The different trannys may be explained by the different tooth count on the speedo drives for the different differential ratios and tires. Ken Quoting Matt Haas <mhaas@xxxxxxx>: > > The tranny that was in the wagon originally was for sure air cooled and > according to the parts book, an M-36. It still has the original radiator > and it does not have the cooler in the bottom tank. The tranny swap was > done two owners ago and they put an aftermarket cooler on it at the time. > > I took a look at my parts books and they list 8 different transmissions > (serviced by 6 part numbers) for 67 199's and 4 different transmissions > for 67 232's. BTW, these counts are just for Americans, I did not look > at other models. I was shocked at how many different automatic > transmissions are used in a given year. The 1967 list is over a half > page long. > > The parts book clearly states both M-36's and M-37's were available > either air or water cooled. > > The car my tranny came out of had A/C so I would assume the water cooled > tranny is part of the heavy duty cooling package which was part of the > factory A/C package. > > Matt > > On 6/12/2009 3:14 PM, Wrambler spouted this sage advice: > > Frank > > I parted out one > > 69 199 auto = aircooled > > 68 199 auto = aircooled > > 68 232 auto = aircooled > > 69 232 auto = aricooled, my car with the S-42 tag. > > I know one of the tranies I sent out west was a 37 and air cooled. > > The remaining two trannies are sitting in my shed, soon to be scrapped as I > have stored them for 10 years now. > > I I can remember to do so I will look at the trans in the shed to see what > they are tagged as before they go away. > > all I have is the tranmissions, not converters or bellhousings. > > > > Believe me, if any of those cars would have had a liquid cooled trans I > would have kept it! or at least known what it was! > > My TSM is either a 66 or 67 and it mentions the liquid cooled trans as > being a "fleet option"... > > > > Guessing what they did with the model numbers at this point is pretty > fruitless, unless we can gather enough info from people to cover enough of > the models in question to rule out swaps and such. > > > > Mark Price > > Morgantown, WV 26508 > > 1969 AMC Rambler, 4.0L, EFI, T-5 > > 2004 Grand Cherokee Laredo, 4.7L, Quadratrac II > > "I realize that death is inevitable. > > I just don't want to be around when it happens!" > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: "Frank Swygert" <farna@xxxxxxx> > > To: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx > > Sent: Friday, June 12, 2009 2:39:35 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern > > Subject: Re: [AMC-list] Was: Anyone have ...now M-3x tranny cooling > > > > No hole and a smooth converter seals it -- no air cooling. Apparently only > the M-35 is air cooled, guess they gave up on air cooling after 66. The 67 > TSM is the only one that indicates different tranny models for different size > engines (M-36 for 199, 37 for 232, 40 for 290/2V, 11 for 290/4V... in the > supplement). That probably indicates that the 35 was used in 66, but may not. > Pre 67 TSMs don't list trans model numbers. Don't know if the M-36 was air > cooled or not, might be. > > > > If someone has a 67-69 American with 199 and original auto trans look at > the passenger side of the bell and see if there's a large opening there. That > indicates the air cooled trans, as would no cooler lines between the trans > and radiator (or external cooler, usually in front of the radiator). AMC > stopped using the M-3x series after 69 -- 1970 199s got a model 40. > > > > --------- > > Date: Thu, 11 Jun 2009 20:32:15 -0400 > > From: Matt Haas <mhaas@xxxxxxx> > > > > It does not have the hole for the air inlet and the T/C didn't have > > anything on it that looked like a fan. Smooth is probably a good > > description of it. A quick look in the parts book says that it should be > > an M-37. 199 cars (which is what is in the car) got M-36's. > > > > Matt > > > > On 6/11/2009 9:38 AM, Frank Swygert spouted this sage advice: > > > >>> Seems like I researched this last time it came up, maybe a year ago. The > > >>> M-35 is air cooled only, the 36 and/or 37 has an extra tube inside in > >>> one corner, the 35 case isn't drilled for that tube. According to Mark, > >>> some of the 4x series were air cooled as well. Does your liquid cooled > >>> 3x have the air cooled torque converter as well as liquid cooling? If it > > >>> has the big hole in the right side of the bell the answer is likely > >>> "yes". The converter has a "fan" made on it in the air cooled models, > >>> but it's not immediately recognizable as a fan. Of course a standard > >>> converter is smooth on the "back" side. I think all the M-3x series were > > >>> primarily air cooled, with the liquid cooler added for additional > >>> cooling when desired/necessary (such as the heavier cars, towing, or > >>> hotter climates). Just doing a little detective work here! > > -- > mhaas@xxxxxxx > Cincinnati, OH > http://www.mattsoldcars.com > 1967 Rambler American wagon > 1968 Rambler American sedan > ================================================================= > According to a February 2003 survey of Internet holdouts released > by UCLA's Center for Communication Policy, people cite > not having a computer as the No. 1 reason they won't go online. > _______________________________________________ > AMC-list mailing list > AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx > http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com > _______________________________________________ AMC-list mailing list AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com