So how many of us is the with 4 speed's
Moderator: Moderators
well the UK ford boxes use a housing that looks from internet pics to be so so similar. not the same box but the whole stick and linkage is so alike you wonder if the same guy designed it
gear stick has a hemisphear on the end
the whole thing is bolted into a kind of honey pot with a threaded collar
plastic or even steal collar into aluminium alloy honey pot just comes out so easily.
you can see the aluminium bit i mean on sandy's pic
Dave
gear stick has a hemisphear on the end
the whole thing is bolted into a kind of honey pot with a threaded collar
plastic or even steal collar into aluminium alloy honey pot just comes out so easily.
you can see the aluminium bit i mean on sandy's pic
Dave
The Greater Knapweed near the Mugwort by the Buckthorn tree is dying
[quote="Dave999
do the falcons suffer with the gear stick coming off in your hands like the vals do
its a nice feature
dave[/quote]
Yes.
I think Ford went to the single rail to up their non-import content. By that time, the 351C's were all Aus built (in other words, 2V heads with 4V inlet manifolds, and as such, were a bit 'softer' than the import US spec big port 4V head engines. Due to emissions laws, ADR27
http://www.infrastructure.gov.au/roads/ ... _adrs.aspx
the last CK617 (the US 4V's) slipped out the door in late 1973 with Top Loaders. After Jan 1974, they were all single rails.
Apart from, as I mentioned, a batch of GT's that mysteriously appeared with Top Loaders through 1976 (just as the GT was being killed off) so that Ford could slip them back through CAMS.
do the falcons suffer with the gear stick coming off in your hands like the vals do

dave[/quote]
Yes.
I think Ford went to the single rail to up their non-import content. By that time, the 351C's were all Aus built (in other words, 2V heads with 4V inlet manifolds, and as such, were a bit 'softer' than the import US spec big port 4V head engines. Due to emissions laws, ADR27
http://www.infrastructure.gov.au/roads/ ... _adrs.aspx
the last CK617 (the US 4V's) slipped out the door in late 1973 with Top Loaders. After Jan 1974, they were all single rails.
Apart from, as I mentioned, a batch of GT's that mysteriously appeared with Top Loaders through 1976 (just as the GT was being killed off) so that Ford could slip them back through CAMS.
4 speeds look and sound great,but the novelty soon seems to wear off, particularly behind a big block so it's auto for me now.
My mustangs are all manual though, they seem to suit smaller less torquey engines better.
Best by far is my T5 conversion although I don't think it would last long on the strip.
My mustangs are all manual though, they seem to suit smaller less torquey engines better.
Best by far is my T5 conversion although I don't think it would last long on the strip.


Actually just thinking about it the one and only car i would get with a 4 speed manual would have to be a 1970 Plymouth Superbird....Oh yeah and not forgeting the 440 six pack to go with it!!!

'You can never go fast enough!'
1966 Dodge Coronet 440 c.i.
1969 Dodge Dart Custom
http://www.americansuperstock.co.uk/

1966 Dodge Coronet 440 c.i.
1969 Dodge Dart Custom
http://www.americansuperstock.co.uk/
