Re: Transmissions (was upgrade paths)
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: Transmissions (was upgrade paths)
- From: "Dave Swingle" <swingle@xxxx>
- Date: Tue, 21 Oct 2003 01:15:52 -0000
I've opened up and repaired several DMC manual transmissions now, and
an convinced that the horsepower "weakness" is somewhat overstated.
This is a pretty stout transmission, with a couple of weak points
that don't seem to be related to horsepower.
- Clutch hydraulics - Failure to replace the plastic line with a
braided one, and the resultant inability to completely disengage the
clutch, eats the syncro/sliding gear. For some reason on the trans I
had, it only "hurt" third gear. This is also what seems to break
shift fork rollpin. A very common failure, a literally 30-cent part
that is in the middle of the transmission. Change that clutch line!
- The big nut on the mainshaft unscrews - This is a somewhat random
occurrence. This is interesting to see, if you didn't know any better
you'd swear that someone attacked the transmission with a 3/4 drill
bit. I've seen a couple of these, the fix is to replace the nut, use
locktite, and weld the hole in the case back up. It does not seem to
actually damage anything (assuming you don't drive it around once it
fails). This appears to be a factory defect - like they don't quite
torque that nut (120 ft-lbs) all the way. I've never heard of this
happening the second time.
- The most interesting thing I've seen was the transmission out of
Rich's Turbo GN-Buick-powered car. This one **seemed** to be
destroyed - it suffered from the nut failure mentioned, AND had been
installed in the car without the use of a pilot bearing (ouch). That
destroyed the input shaft. When we drained the oil it looked
horrible - full of metal shavings. But - once cleaned out, everything
inside was fine, NO evidence of wear, NO other damage. The metal
shavings were from the nut drilling its way out the back of the
trans. Cleaned it up, replaced the input shaft and the nut, put it
all back together. Repair cost was under $100 (not counting my free
labor!). This is a 250+ HP car, and based on the clutch wear it had
not had an easy life. Still an insanely fast car, by the way.
- The wierdest failure is the one I'm working on right now. This
otherwise stock car has eaten three input shafts (at the collar) in
25K miles. No other issues. There had to be something wrong other
than the input shaft, so we kept looking. The issue was that the
factory (or a prior mechanic, no way to tell) had not installed the
two alignment roll-pins in the bellhousing that mate it to the
engine. The mis-alignment caused the input shaft coupling to wear
tremendously. Based on the bolt fit to the bellhousing, the mis-
alignment could be as much as 1/16" inch.
The only person I've heard of truly snapping input shafts is the guy
who was at Memphis with the 350 Chevy engine in the car - and based
on his driving style it was not completely surprising. I have to
admit that it is impressive to see a DMC smoke the tires on dry
pavement, however. That fact that he could do this more than once
without breaking things was impressive too.
Dave S
--- In dmcnews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, Andrew <aos+yahoo@xxxx> wrote:
> Any plans to beef up the transmission to match the increased power
of
> these upgrade paths? I know I'd be a bit worried about the torque
a
> nitrous system would be pushing through.
>
> It's my understanding that the only real problem with the
transmission and
> higher powered engines is the input shafts.
> -andrew
> #4115
> Houston TX
Back to the Home of PROJECT VIXEN