" From: Tom Jennings <tomj@xxxxxxx> " " On Wed, 6 Oct 2004, Sandwich Maker wrote: " " > warning! there are two t-14 splines! " " Oh great! this is amc, remember? ;^> " > '68-'72/3 are like t-96, coarse. '73/4-6 are fine. i -think- it's a " > tf spline, shared with the 904. pretty sure. " " Mine is known to be 1969. I have two driveshafts, both the same spline, " that fit the 904 I have laying about. So it appears I already " have the wrong one. i was under the impression that the early t-14 was the same spline as t-96 and alum auto. the mitchell doesn't distinguish yokes for them. " I'm getting one from Joe Fulton this coming weekend. I'll check " the yoke of course, but if the length is wrong I'll probably " have one made to length. also, all but earliest '68-'70 javelin and american 232s had t-14s with the driveshaft you need. yes, according to the mitchell, they use the same shaft. " It sure seems like there are very few manual trans early " hornet/gremlins. I would have thought 3-speed Gremlins would be " common but if they were, they are no more. None of the yards I've " called have any. A driveshaft is easy once I find the front yoke " (even the rear end driveshaft shops can find). also note - early hornets and grems had t-96s as base tranny. this doesn't change the clutch linkage though. " The clutch parts seem to be rare at this point; the donors were " low-value when they were merely old, and I can only guess that " V8 4-speed people consumed the rest for conversions. you mean bellcrank etc? let me guess - they have to be pre-'72... or you wouldn't be searching for an early one. maybe someone with a parts book can tell you if anything post-'72 will do you. that should be the same for many years. " I'll keep looking, but unless I get lucky, it's going to be " a hydraulic clutch, unless I can adapt the 60's car linkage " I've got (likely, the pushrod side requires fab). Even the jeep " products I see in yards are autos, though there was a pioneer " with a rod linkage. why won't the '60s linkage just bolt in? ________________________________________________________________________ Andrew Hay the genius nature internet rambler is to see what all have seen adh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and think what none thought