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-   -   Restoring Rusty (https://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/showthread.php?t=645440)

Gregski 07-27-2018 11:35 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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after a few head scratches and purging my mind of the 3 speed how to videos, I found the rather large clip that was holding the remainder of the gear assembly in the tail housing

... and she slid right out

in the last pic from left to right (or rear most to front most) we got 1st gear then the reverse slider and then the 2nd gear, my buddy Mopar Seth believes the noise problem lies in there, since it is quiet with 1st gear engaged, but as soon as we disengage it we get the rattle chatter

Gregski 07-27-2018 11:40 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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nest to come off was the brownish orange plastic speedo gear, the metal clip holds it in place

Gregski 07-27-2018 11:45 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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YALR - Yet Another Lock Ring and the rear main shaft bearing comes off, this one took a little flat screw driver (ok crow bar) gentle persuasion to slip off, this reveals the wavy washer which I was told was an afterthought repair/fix of one of the noises these transmissions like to make

Gregski 07-27-2018 11:52 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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so then things will get loose and we will be able to slide off the rear bearing, the wavy washer, another washer, 1st gear, 1st-2nd + reverse slider, and one syncro

Gregski 07-27-2018 11:57 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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hang in there, almost done, another snap ring, a clutch hub, the last synchro, and 2nd gear slide off

Gregski 07-27-2018 11:59 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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and here i am giving you the shaft

Gregski 07-28-2018 12:00 AM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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and here are all the bits that make up the main shaft from left to right or rear to the front of the vehicle

note the one shinny new synchro, getting lined up in parallel for replacement

Gregski 07-28-2018 12:03 AM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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next it was time to clean the old gasket residue off of the case

Gregski 07-28-2018 12:04 AM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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it's wire wheelin' time

Gregski 07-28-2018 12:06 AM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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goodness, how many sides does this thing have

Gregski 07-28-2018 12:08 AM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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the tail housing also got some love

Gregski 07-28-2018 12:10 AM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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and pretty soon I had transferred all the old gasket material on to my ol' favorite shirt

Clean Up Fun Level = 0

Gregski 07-28-2018 12:11 AM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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just some random pics of all four new syncros, showing they all be the same

RDrancher 07-28-2018 08:38 AM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
Well you sure ain't no quitter.

MikeB 07-28-2018 09:48 AM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by RDrancher (Post 8310500)
Well you sure ain't no quitter.

I'll second that!

Have a friend who just finished going through a cast iron 70s Mopar 4-speed, which is based on a 3-speed. That means 3rd gear is 1:1 and 4th is an overdrive gear where third would normally be on the countershaft and mainshaft. And like you, he had never done one before, but just dug in and got 'er done!

Gregski 07-28-2018 09:49 AM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by RDrancher (Post 8310500)
Well you sure ain't no quitter.

thank you it's that small town farm boy tenacity, I remember one time my dad and I were wrenching in a carport of our 2 bedroom apartment, we were having a tough time with something, and I wanted to quit, and he said "and what are we going to do, cry about it?" and that was that, a boy became a man, ha ha

Gregski 07-28-2018 09:53 AM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MikeB (Post 8310536)
I'll second that!

Have a friend who just finished going through a cast iron 70s Mopar 4-speed, which is based on a 3-speed. That means 3rd gear is 1:1 and 4th is an overdrive gear where third would normally be on the countershaft and mainshaft. And like you, he had never done one before, but just dug in and got 'er done!

Cool, good for him, this may be embarrassing for me to admit but only after taking it apart and attempting to upload the photos to this forum did I finally conceptualize how the hewk those transmission guts work, I would stare at pictures in a book or on the InterWebs and it was as if I was trying to learn how to swim by reading about it, know what I mean, so if nothing else I learned something from doing things hands on

MikeB 07-28-2018 10:04 AM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Gregski (Post 8310539)
Cool, good for him, this may be embarrassing for me to admit but only after taking it apart and attempting to upload the photos to this forum did I finally conceptualize how the hewk those transmission guts work, I would stare at pictures in a book or on the InterWebs and it was as if I was trying to learn how to swim by reading about it, know what I mean, so if nothing else I learned something from doing things hands on

My friend relied heavily on the advice and support of Mopar trans parts specialist somewhere in the Northeast. Hey, this stuff is a team sport!

rusty76 07-28-2018 11:51 AM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
Well done. If one thing racing taught me over the years is that just because you haven’t done it or seen it doesn’t mean you can’t do it.

hatzie 07-28-2018 02:41 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Gregski (Post 8310065)
naturally the input shaft separated from the main shaft and half a dozen needle roller bearings were on the run, there are 14 total

Important Lesson Learned: I sorta knew this already but the eye opening experience is to discover that although the short input shaft is on the same plane as the main shaft ie they make one horizontal line, they are actually two separate spinning shafts independent of each other, don't laugh it's obvious to sum, but us idiot savants need time to digest, jk

I believe the 4th gear ie direct drive, so 1:1 ratio lives on the input shaft

Kinda wakes you right up when those needles drop out of the gear end of the input shaft and roll through the cracks between the floor planks into the root cellar under the barn...
Ohhh Crap!!! What the heck was that? :lol::lol::lol:

Gregski 07-28-2018 03:25 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by hatzie (Post 8310685)
Kinda wakes you right up when those needles drop out of the gear end of the input shaft and roll through the cracks between the floor planks into the root cellar under the barn...
Ohhh Crap!!! What the heck was that? :lol::lol::lol:

Please remove your webcam from my garage!

Gregski 07-28-2018 03:28 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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Quote:

Originally Posted by Gregski (Post 8309764)
I was a hopin' the truck gods would smile upon me as I removed the side cover first with the gear box still attached to the engine, I figured what the hewk lets go for the easy win, maybe some spring or clamp or bracket fell off in there and is just bouncin' around

well no such luck, everything appeared in order, although at first I thought could that fork be broken like that, well no a quick stare and compare with the new one on All State Gear dot com revealed that's just how the 3-4 ? I think they mean 1-2 shift fork is

well dummy, where's the reverse shifter detent ball? I can see the spring poking out but where's the ball? This most likely is causing the idler gear to slide back and forth just enough to make the noise you describe, so maybe a 3 cent ball from Ace Hardware was all you needed instead of rebuilding the whole transmission, just saying ~ your Gemini alter ego evil twin

hatzie 07-28-2018 03:58 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Gregski (Post 8310707)
Please remove your webcam from my garage!

An old fart I worked for when I was a youngster told me "You can't get a patent on it. Guaranteed someone else already screwed that up the same way you did." :lol::lol::lol::lol:

Lucky that little ball bearing didn't get caught somewhere more important. What let it escape?

Gregski 07-28-2018 04:41 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by hatzie (Post 8310718)
An old fart I worked for when I was a youngster told me "You can't get a patent on it. Guaranteed someone else already screwed that up the same way you did." :lol::lol::lol::lol:

Lucky that little ball bearing didn't get caught somewhere more important. What let it escape?

No idea maybe the previous rebuilder forgot to put it back in cause I did not find it on the inside anywhere, you would think it would be stuck to the magnet.

Gregski 07-28-2018 04:45 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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well before I realized the detent ball was missing I already removed the counter shaft so might as well walk you through it

I gotta be honest I was pretty intimidated about pressing this shaft out, but it turned out to be super easy and all I needed was a hammer

the first two pics show a good view of the idler gear and how it slides side to side - this may be the smoking gun

Gregski 07-28-2018 04:48 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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here I show you that the counter shaft is keyed or at least has a thingie thingie that prevents it from spinning or at least from getting pressed in too far

Gregski 07-28-2018 04:53 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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and here is the counter shaft gear cluster and it's 54 roller bearings, 27 in the front and 27 in the rear

note the missing washer on the left, the top row is the used washers/spacers the bottom are the new replacement ones - I did install one from the rebuild kit when I reassembled it and it fit great no drag or nothing

Gregski 07-28-2018 05:02 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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I put all 54 used counter shaft roller needle bearings into a zip loc bag so that I wouldn't mix them up with the brand new ones

looks like they give you 1 extra one in the rebuild kit so make sure you count them out ahead of time

Gregski 07-28-2018 05:05 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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after wiping the cluster gear clean and dry you need some sort of grease to keep the roller bearings put, I'm sure this ain't the "right" kind, but we are using such a small dab of it that it really don't matter, plus I promised my dad I would use up all this grease we bought 35 years ago before I die, ha ha

Gregski 07-28-2018 05:07 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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not sure you can tell in this pic but the counter shaft had some slight scaring on it, if I had a replacement one I would have swapped it out, but I didn't so I smoothed it out the best I could with some super fine sand paper and back in it went, Roadkill style

Gregski 07-28-2018 05:16 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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so after spending $40 bucks at Napa on the wrong type of snap ring pliers, I went to O'Reilly's and spent $15 on the right ones, these they call Lock Ring Pliers learn and live people, learn and live

Gregski 07-28-2018 05:19 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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and with that the reassembly got under way... as they say in your favorite Hayne's or Chilton's manual "Installation is the opposite of removal"

Gregski 07-28-2018 05:22 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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speedo gear went back on

Gregski 07-28-2018 05:23 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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gooped the input shaft and shoved the 14 new bearings in from the rebuild kit

Gregski 07-28-2018 06:14 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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my first attempt was to install the input shaft and the main shaft without the tail housing, that failed cause I could not get the tail housing back on after that, needed a third arm for that large snap ring to expand it over the rear bearing, oh well

Gregski 07-28-2018 06:17 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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so got the new rear seal installed in the tail housing by "gently" tapping the tail housing on the garage floor - shhhh don't tell

Gregski 07-28-2018 06:20 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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so test fitted the new tail housing gasket, as it appears to only go on one way, and then I gooped it with that red devil's snot so it would stay in place

Note: the bottom tail housing bolt is not in a blind hole, so goop it with red snot and also you can use this to drain the transmission fully, you probably all knew that but I didn't ha

MikeB 07-28-2018 06:20 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
I like the natural light available behind your workbench! If that was my garage, those blinds would have a trendy mottled look from chemical and petrochemical splatters.

Gregski 07-28-2018 06:24 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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was looking forward to swapping the rubber O-ring on the speedo bullet but the one provided was a bit too loose and way too skinny, Mini Epic Fail

Gregski 07-28-2018 06:26 PM

Re: Restoring Rusty
 
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as a self proclaimed master transmission rebuilder now, I like to keep myself humble by cleaning my own bolts


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